Lexington Books
Pages: 226
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-1760-6 • Hardback • September 2007 • $128.00 • (£98.00)
Megan S. Lloyd is associate professor at King's College in Wilkes-Barre, PA.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Chapter 1: "To Speak Welsh": Nonsense and Subversion in Henry IV, Part I
Chapter 3 Chapter 2: "The Lady Speaks in Welsh": Lady Mortimer and Tudor Policy in Shakespeare's I Henry IV
Chapter 4 Chapter 3: "I cannot speak your England": Language, Britishness, and Shakespeare's Henriad
Chapter 5 Chapter 4: Acquiesce or Eat My Leek: Approaches to Assimilation in The Merry Wives of Windsor and Henry V
Chapter 6 Chapter 5: Location, Location, Location: Wales in Cymbeline
Chapter 7 Chapter 6: Welsh "Noise" and Communicating Couples: Playing Welsh Language and Culture on Stage
Chapter 8 Chapter 7: "Here the Lady Sings a Welsh Song": Shakespeare's Welsh Language in Performance
Chapter 9 Appendix A: The Welsh Language and the Welsh Character on Stage
Chapter 10 Appendix B: A Note on Editions
The place of Wales in Shakespeare, and the place of Shakespeare in Wales, extends far beyond the setting of Cymbeline and the character of Glendower. Megan Lloyd, like Fluellen, offers a Welsh correction to an English condition—the condition of paying too little heed to England's neighbor nations. Lloyd is to be congratulated for bringing such clarity of purpose and critical acumen to discussion of the vital but vexed nature of Anglo-Welsh relations in the early modern period.'Speak It in Welsh' is a valuable contribution to current debates around colonial and national identities in Shakespeare and in Renaissance studies more generally. By examining the Welsh dimensions of Shakespeare alongside the work of his contemporaries, and establishing a detailed historical context for questions of language and identity, Lloyd makes a convincing case for the importance of Wales as a site of resistance, a source of rhetoric, and a staging post for idea about empire and union. All those interested in the politics of performance, and the ways in which issues of race and representation crisscross the drama, will find something to savour in this rich and rewarding study.
— Willy Maley, professor of Renaissance studies, University of Glasgow
This attractively written volume provides an authoritative point of entry into the intriguing extent to which Wales and its native language figured in the works of Shakespeare. It casts new light on issues of identity, anglicization, and the emergence of Cambro-Britons in the days of 'The Bard.'
— Geraint Jenkins, director, University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies
The references to the plays are very comprehensive and the historical background informative....She has undoubtedly made a considerable contribution to understanding the position of the Welsh in the time of Elizabeth.
— Renaissance Quarterly
The volume is clearly the result of several years' study and is fully researched and up-to-date, presenting not only a study from the Shakespearean side (the author is an expert in this area) but also casts the net wider and gives a picture of ethnicity in the Elizabethan period, including intermarriage and language problems; the author looks at attitudes to the situation of the Welsh language in the period , and the exiled Welsh in England (and in particular, in London) in the period....The study is successful, and what we have is an interesting and full picture of Elizabethan society with a focus on Wales and the Welsh language....full, informative, and fascinating....Speak It in Welsh is a long-overdue study of this topic and will hopefully prove to be the first of several.
— Sixteenth Century Journal
Megan Lloyd's 'Speak It in Welsh' illuminates a usually forgotten aspect of early modern British studies: the place of Wales and the Welsh. By examining how Welsh characters were portrayed in Shakespeare's plays, Lloyd goes to the heart of issues of language, identity, and nation. Her study not only examines Welsh characters, but places them within a cultural context with descriptions of historical Welsh people in early modern Britain. Thoroughly researched and elegantly written,'Speak It in Welsh' is an important scholarly contribution.
— Carole Levin, Willa Cather Professor of History, University of Nebraska, author of The Heart and Stomach of a King: Elizabeth I and the Politi