There has been a great variety of critical approach to
Shakespeare's work since his death. During the 17th and 18th cent., Shakespeare
was both admired and condemned. Since then, much of the adverse criticism has
not been considered relevant, although certain issues have continued to
interest critics throughout the years. For instance, charges against his moral
propriety were made by Samuel Johnson in the 18th cent. and by George Bernard
Shaw in the 20th.Early criticism was directed primarily at questions of form.
Shakespeare was criticized for mixing comedy and tragedy and failing to observe
the unities of time and place prescribed by the rules of classical drama. Dryden and Johnson were among the critics
claiming that he had corrupted the language with false wit, puns, and
ambiguity. While some of his early plays might justly be charged with a
frivolous use of such devices, 20th-century criticism has tended to praise
their use in later plays as adding depth and resonance of meaning.Generally
critics of the 17th and 18th cent. accused Shakespeare of a want of artistic
restraint while praising him for a fecund imagination. Samuel Johnson, while
agreeing with many earlier criticisms, defended Shakespeare on the question of
classical rules. On the issue of unity of time and place he argued that no one
considers the stage play to be real life anyway. Johnson inaugurated the
criticism of Shakespeare's characters that reached its culmination in the late
19th cent. with the work of A. C. Bradley.
The German critics Gotthold Lessing and Augustus Wilhelm von Schlegel saw Shakespeare as a romantic,
different in type from the classical poets, but on equal footing. Schlegel first
elucidated the structural unity of Shakespeare's plays, a concept of unity that
is developed much more completely by the English poet and critic Samuel Coleridge.
While Schlegel and Coleridge were establishing Shakespeare's plays as artistic,
organic unities, such 19th-century critics as the German Georg Gervinus and the
Irishman Edward Dowden were trying to see positive moral
tendencies in the plays. The 19th-century English critic William Hazlitt,
who continued the development of character analysis begun by Johnson,
considered each Shakespearean character to be unique, but found a unity through
analogy and gradation of characterization. While A. C. Bradley marks the
culmination of romantic 19th-century character study, he also suggested that
the plays had unifying imagistic atmospheres, an idea that was further
developed in the 20th cent.The tendency in 20th-century criticism was to
abandon both the study of character as independent personality and the
assumption that moral considerations can be separated from their dramatic and
aesthetic context. The plays were increasingly viewed in terms of the unity of
image, metaphor, and tone. Caroline Spurgeon began the careful classification
of Shakespeare's imagery, and although her attempts were later felt to be
somewhat naive and morally biased, her work is a landmark in Shakespearean
criticism. Other important trends in 20th-century criticism included the
Freudian approach, such as Ernest Jones's
Oedipal interpretation of Hamlet; the study of Shakespeare in terms of the
Elizabethan worldview and Elizabethan stage conventions; and the study of the
plays in mythic terms

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