词条 | Eric Sams | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
| name = Eric Sams | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = | pseudonym = | birth_name = | birth_date = {{Birth date|df=yes|1926|5|3}} | birth_place = London | death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|2004|9|13|1926|5|3}} | death_place = London | resting_place = | occupation = Musicologist and literary scholar | education = | alma_mater = Corpus Christi College, Cambridge | period = | genre = | subject = | movement = | notableworks = The Songs of Hugo Wolf (1961, 1983), The Songs of Robert Schumann (1969, 1993), The Real Shakespeare: Retrieving the Early years, 1564-1594 (1995) | spouse = | partner = | children = | relatives = | influences = | influenced = | awards = | signature = | signature_alt = | website = | portaldisp = }} Eric Sams (3 May 1926 – 13 September 2004) was a British musicologist and Shakespeare scholar. Born in London, he was raised in Essex. His early brilliance in school (Westcliff High School for Boys) earned him a scholarship to Corpus Christi College, Cambridge at the age of sixteen. His lifelong passion for puzzles and ciphers stood him in good stead in his wartime service in British Intelligence (1944–47). After the war he read modern languages at Cambridge (French and German), 1947–50; upon graduation he entered the Civil Service. In 1952 he married Enid Tidmarsh (died 2002), a pianist. Their elder son, Richard, is a Japanese scholar and chess master working in Tokyo; their younger son Jeremy Sams is a composer, lyricist, playwright, and theatre director. MusicologyIn music, Sams wrote on and studied a range of subjects and genres, though his specialty was German lieder. He wrote volumes on the songs of Robert Schumann, Johannes Brahms, and Hugo Wolf. His theory of song-motifs is one of the 20th century's most important contributions to the research in the field of German song studies. From 1965 to 1980 he was a regular contributor to The Musical Times with essays and reviews. Most notably, he wrote on Schumann's and Brahms's ciphers and music codes (the "Clara-Theme", among others), on Elgar's Enigma and on Schubert's and Schumann's pathologies. His New Grove articles include Schubert and Schumann work-list, "Wolf" and Wolf work-list, "Mörike", "Hanslick" and "Musical Cryptography" (also in Grove 6). He reviewed opera performance for the New Statesman, 1976–78 and wrote record reviews for Gramophone 1976–78. Shakespeare
In the field of Shakespeare studies, Sams specialized in the early phases of Shakespeare's career. He published over a hundred papers on the subject and wrote two books, The Real Shakespeare: Retrieving the Early Years, 1564-1594 (New Haven & London 1995) and The Real Shakespeare: Retrieving the Later Years, 1594-1616 (unfinished at the time of Sams' death, an edited text being published as an e-book by the Centro Studi "Eric Sams", 2008) . Building on the work of W. J. Courthope, Hardin Craig, E. B. Everitt, Seymour Pitcher and others, Sams' thesis was that "Shakespeare was an early starter who rewrote nobody's plays but his own", and that the young playwright "may have been a master of structure before he was a master of language".[1] Far from being a plagiarist, Shakespeare found accusations of plagiarism (e.g. Greene's "beautified with our feathers") offensive (Sonnets 30, 112). Trusting the early 'biographical' sources John Aubrey and Nicholas Rowe, Sams re-assessed Shakespeare's early and 'missing' years, and argued through detailed textual analysis that Shakespeare began writing plays from the mid-1580s, in a style not now recognisably Shakespearean. In full critical editions of the two plays, he defended the attributions of the anonymous Edmund Ironside and Edward III to Shakespeare. The so-called 'Source Plays' and 'Derivative Plays' (The Taming of a Shrew, The Troublesome Reign of King John, etc.), and the so-called 'Bad Quartos', are (printers' errors aside) his own first versions of famous later plays.[2] As many of the Quarto title-pages proclaim, Shakespeare was an assiduous reviser of his own work, rewriting, enlarging and emending to the end of his life.[3] He "struck the second heat / upon the Muses' anvil," as Ben Jonson put it in the Folio verse tribute. Sams dissented from 20th-century orthodoxy, arguing strongly against the concept of memorial reconstruction by amnesiac actors, which he called a "wrong-headed" theory. "Authorial revision of early plays is the only rational alternative."[4] The pirated copies referred to in the preamble to the Folio were the 1619 quartos, mostly already superseded plays, for "Shakespeare was disposed to release his own popular early version[s] for acting and printing because his own masterly revision[s] would soon be forthcoming".[5] Sams believed that Shakespeare in his retirement was revising his oeuvre "for definitive publication". The "apprentice plays" which had been reworked were naturally omitted from the Folio.[6] Sams also rejected 20th-century orthodoxy on Shakespeare's collaboration: with the exception of Sir Thomas More, Two Noble Kinsmen and Henry VIII, the plays were solely his, though many were only partly revised.[7][8] By Sams' authorship- and dating-arguments, Shakespeare wrote not only the earliest "modern" chronicle play, The Troublesome Reign, c.1588, but also "the earliest known modern comedy and tragedy", A Shrew and the Ur-Hamlet ( = the 1603 Quarto).[9]
Critical reaction to Sams' 1995 book was largely favourable. "Much of what is postulated for [Shakespeare's] boyhood years seems convincing," wrote Jonathan Keates, "including a background in Catholic recusancy and a schooling interrupted by family financial crisis. Neither is the idea of the poet as a reviser of his own early work implausible, and Sams is a persuasive salesman of his big idea that so-called 'bad quartos' represent valuable first thoughts."[54] "His unwillingness to collude with academics against actors," wrote Professor Stephen Logan, "springs from a deep respect for the past. He would sooner trust eyewitness testimony, however informal, than the authority of [the Shakespeare Establishment] consensus."[55] Selected works
References
Notes1. ^Sams 1995, p.146 2. ^Sams 1995, pp.182-183: "The early Hamlet, A Shrew, The Troublesome Reign, The Famous Victories of Henry V, King Leir ... were performed in Shakespeare's heyday, by actors and companies well known to him; he must have known who had written them. On any objective economical appraisal, he had." 3. ^Sams 1995, p.169: "1598, Love's Labour's Lost, 'newly corrected and augmented'; 1599, Romeo and Juliet, 'newly corrected, augmented and amended'; 1599, 1 Henry IV, 'newly corrected by W. Shakespeare'; 1599, The Passionate Pilgrim, containing early versions of Sonnets 138 and 144; 1602, Richard III, 'newly augmented'; 1604, Hamlet, 'enlarged to almost as much again as it was'; 1608, Richard II, 'with new additions of the Parliament Scene, and the deposing of King Richard'; 1616, The Rape of Lucrece, 'newly revised'; 1623, the First Folio, where each of the eighteen plays already published now has textual variants (Titus Andronicus has a whole new scene)." 4. ^Sams 1995, p.160 5. ^Sams 2008, p.271 6. ^Sams 1995, p.171 7. ^Sams 1995, pp.185-188 8. ^Sams 2008, pp.117-118 9. ^Sams 1995, p.152 10. ^Sams 2008, p.149-150, p.198-211 11. ^Sams 2008, p.269 12. ^Sams 2008, pp.302-312 13. ^Sams, Shakespeare's Lost Play, Edmund Ironside, 1986 14. ^Sams, Shakespeare's Lost Play, Edmund Ironside, 1986 15. ^Sams 1995, pp.120-135 16. ^Sams 1995, pp.146-153 17. ^Sams 1995, pp.136-145 18. ^Sams 1995, p.171 19. ^Sams, Shakespeare's Lost Play, Edmund Ironside, 1986, p.43 20. ^Sams, Shakespeare's Lost Play, Edmund Ironside, 1986, p.30 21. ^Sams 1995, p.164 22. ^Sams, 2008, p.449 23. ^Sams 2008, p.117, p.164 24. ^Sams 2008, pp.114-125 25. ^Sams, Shakespeare's Edward III: An Early Play Restored to the Canon, 1996 26. ^Sams, Shakespeare's Edward III: An Early Play Restored to the Canon, 1996 27. ^Sams 2008, p.151 28. ^Sams 1995, pp.154-162 29. ^Sams 1995, pp.154-162 30. ^Sams 1995, p.115 31. ^Sams 2008, p.69 32. ^Sams 1995, p.185 33. ^Sams 2008, pp.159-164 34. ^Sams 1995, pp.103-113 35. ^Sams 2008, pp.61-67 36. ^Sams 2008, pp.73-80 37. ^Sams 1995, p.116 38. ^Sams 2008, pp.183-197 39. ^Sams 2008, p.176 40. ^Sams 2008, p.176 41. ^Sams 2008, p.150 42. ^Sams 1995, p.101 43. ^Sams 2008, p. 71, pp.165-174 44. ^Sams 1995, p.xv 45. ^Sams 2008, p.247 46. ^Sams 2008, pp.234-242. (Chapter relating this to The Weakest Goeth to the Wall, c.1586, appears unfinished. Sams 2008, pp.221-223.) 47. ^Sams 2008, pp.234-242 48. ^Sams 2008, pp.261-267 49. ^Sams 2008, p.199 50. ^Sams 2008, p.200 51. ^Sams 2008, p.199, p.224 52. ^Sams 1995, pp.163-166 53. ^Sams 2008, pp.117-118 54. ^The Observer Review, 5 March 1995 55. ^The Times, London, 9 Feb. 1995 External links
7 : British musicologists|People educated at Westcliff High School for Boys|Alumni of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge|Shakespearean scholars|1926 births|2004 deaths|20th-century musicologists |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。