Swansong at the Seattle Shakespeare Company; Or, Historical Fiction vs. Disciplined Historicism

A Swansong for Speculative Biography?

Authors

  • Todd Borlik University of Washington

Abstract

This essay opens with a review of the Seattle Shakespeare Company's production of Swansong, Patrick Page's new play about the stormy friendship between Shakespeare and Ben Jonson. After examining the highpoints of the script and performance, the essay proceeds to read the rivalry between the two playwrights as a meta-commentary on the unspoken rivalry between academic scholarship and historical fiction. Since New Historicism has in effect elevated the "plausible" to an acceptable target of scholarly inquiry, historical fiction has gained an unprecedented respectability. As literary historians now retreat from speculative methodologies, historical fiction may provide a significant alternative venue for imaginative reconstructions eschewed by documentary biography.

Author Biography

Todd Borlik, University of Washington

Todd Andrew Borlik teaches Shakespeare and early modern English literature at the University of Washington, where he completed his Ph.D. in 2008. His work has appeared in Shakespeare Bulletin, The Shakespeare Newsletter, and Early Theatre. He has just accepted a position as an assistant professor at Bloomsburg University.

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Published

2008-09-01

Issue

Section

Appropriations in Performance Reviews