in Germaine Greer's Shakespeare book of the eighties

bulb bulb at vheissu.net
Wed Mar 20 15:35:45 CDT 2019


Greer's point was that, given the scarce facts we know about S and his wife, she was entitled to write a biography in which she weaves the same facts in another way as men did before her. This was, I remember when the biography came out, rather confusing for some readers (usually men).

And God bless my oldest sister for pointing me to Greer's existence.

-----Original Message-----
From: Pynchon-l <pynchon-l-bounces at waste.org> On Behalf Of Mark Kohut
Sent: woensdag 20 maart 2019 21:10
To: cfabel <cfabel at sfasu.edu>; pynchon -l <pynchon-l at waste.org>
Subject: NP: in Germaine Greer's Shakespeare book of the eighties

---she got her Ph D. with a thesis on Shakespeare,---- she makes use of the great philosopher, Wittgenstein......

In this way: Shakespeare's many-windowed world is a rich 'form of life'
so to speak, which he, too logical, found hard to enter easily but knew it was real and deeper than he could easily feel it.

This is my paraphrase so beware unreliable readers and vary your judgmental mileage.
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