000 05485cam a2200385 a 4500
001 ocn191078413
003 OCoLC
005 20230428073902.0
008 080814s2007 nyu b 001 0beng d
010 _a 2008298748
020 _a9780061537158
020 _a0061537152
040 _aUPZ
_beng
_cUPZ
_dDLC
_dBAKER
_dJED
_dBTCTA
_dYDXCP
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_dMNL
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_dMOV
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042 _alccopycat
043 _ae-uk-en
050 0 0 _aPR2906
_b.G74 2007b
082 0 4 _a822.33
_222
100 1 _aGreer, Germaine,
_d1939-
_929901
245 1 0 _aShakespeare's wife /
250 _a1st U.S. ed.
260 _aNew York :
_bHarper,
_c�2007.
300 _a406 pages ;
_c24 cm
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 379-388) and index.
505 0 _aIntroduction: considering the poor reputation of wives generally, in particular the wives of literary men, and the traditional disparagement of the wife of the man of the millennium -- Chapter one: introducing the extensive and reputable family of Hathaway alias Gardner of Shottery together with the curious fact that one of their kinsmen was a successful playwright for the Admiral's Men -- Chapter two: introducing the Shakespeare family, with particular attention to the Bard's mother and her role in the oft-told story of the downfall of John Shakespeare -- Chapter three: of Ann Hathaway's looks and demeanour, of age at marriage in the 1580's, the courtship of older women by younger men and whether Shakespeare's wife could read -- Chapter four: of what is likely to happen when a town boy with nothing to his name beyond a way with words woos a serious young woman of good prospects -- Chapter five: of the making of a match, of impediments to marriage and how to overcome them, of bonds and special licences and pregnancy as a way of forcing the issue, of bastards and bastardy, and the girl who got away -- Chapter six: of handfasts, troth-plights and bundling, of rings, gauds, and conceits, and what was likely to happen on the big day -- Chapter seven: considering how and where the bard and his bride set up house, of cottages and cottaging, and of how they understood their obligations to each other -- Chapter eight: of pregnancy, travail and childbirth, of christening and churching, and the society of women -- Chapter nine: pondering how and when it was that young Shakespeare quit Stratford, leaving wife and children to fend for themselves, and whether he dared risk his health and theirs by consorting with prostitutes -- Chapter ten: suggesting that, having sent her boy husband to seek his fortune, with three small children to look after, Ann Shakespeare found work she could do indoors, and with the help of her haberdasher brother-in-law might even have prospered -- Chapter eleven: of how one Stratford boy became a leading printer, and another wrote a sexy poem that became a notorious best-seller, being literally read to pieces, and Ann buried her only son -- Chapter twelve: treating of the curious circumstances of the grant of arms made to William Shakespeare, and the acquisition of the compromise titled to a rambling and ruinous house in a town he spent little or no time in -- Chapter thirteen: of hunger and disorder, introducing the villain of the piece, Sir Edward Greville, who contrived the foul murder of the Bailiff of Stratford, and Ann's friend and ally the young lawyer Thomas Greene -- Chapter fourteen: of Susanna and her match with a gentleman of London and a midsummer wedding at last -- Chapter fifteen: of Ann's reading of the sonnets -- Chapter sixteen: of the poet's younger daughter Judith and the Quiney family, of Ann as maltster and money-lender, and the deaths of Mary and Edmund Shakespeare -- Chapter seventeen: in which Shakespeare returns to the town some say he never left and lives the life of an Anglican gentleman while Ann continues to live the life of a puritan townswoman -- Chapter eighteen: of Shakespeare's last illness and death and how Ann Shakespeare handled the situation -- Chapter nineteen: of Shakespeare's lop-sided will and Ann's options -- dower right, widow-bed or destitute dependency -- Chapter twenty: of burials, and monuments, widows' mites and widows' work, and the quiet death of the quiet woman of Stratford -- Chapter twenty-one: in which the intrepid author makes the absurd suggestion that Ann Shakespeare could have been involved in the First Folio project, that she might have contributed not only papers but also money to indemnify the publishers against loss and enable them to sell a book that was very expensive to produce at a price that young gentlemen could pay.
520 _aChallenges popular beliefs about the estranged nature of Shakespeare's marriage to Ann Hathaway, placing their relationship in a social and historical context that poses alternative theories about her rural upbringing and role in the bard's professional life.
600 1 0 _aHathaway, Anne,
_d1556?-1623.
_929902
600 1 0 _aShakespeare, William,
_d1564-1616
_xMarriage.
_929903
600 1 0 _aShakespeare, William,
_d1564-1616
_xRelations with women.
_929904
648 7 _a1500 - 1699
_2fast
_929905
650 0 _aAuthors' spouses
_zEngland
_vBiography.
_929906
650 0 _aWomen
_zEngland
_xSocial conditions
_y17th century.
_929907
650 0 _aWomen
_zEngland
_xSocial conditions
_y16th century.
_929908
655 0 _aBiography.
_996793
942 _2ddc
_cF
999 _c37320
_d37320