The "feminization" of Shakespeare took a variety of forms, for unadulterated Shakespeare was seen as improper for a delicate female mind (hence the publication of the Reverend Bowdler's popular Family Shakespeare within a decade of Tales from Shakespeare). 1 By ignoring Mary we overlook not only her contribution to Tales from Shakespeare, but, even more important, the ways in which she deliberately directed this project toward a female audience. Although the book was Mary's idea and she was its primary writer, the Tales were published under Charles's name well into the twentieth century. Mary began the project and wrote fourteen of the twenty tales (the comedies and romances), while Charles contributed versions of six tragedies. As a result, her role in the composition of Tales from Shakespeare has been almost completely overlooked. Mary's family and friends, it seems, were kinder to her than literary history has been today she is remembered almost exclusively as the perpetrator of a lurid matricide. Mary recovered and spent the remainder of her long life looking after her brother Charles and writing children's books, including the popular Tales from Shakespeare (1807). On September 21, 1796, in a fit of madness, Mary Lamb picked up a knife and fatally stabbed her mother.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |