illustrated portrait of English playwright and poet William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare

Start Free Trial

Editor's Choice

Was William Shakespeare a humanist?

Quick answer:

William Shakespeare is often considered a Renaissance humanist due to his integration of Greco-Roman literature and humanist values in his plays. His works, such as Julius Caesar and Hamlet, reflect classical influences and emphasize the worth of human virtues like kindness and courage. While not definitively a humanist by modern definitions, his characters often prioritize human reasoning and ethics, suggesting a strong humanist influence in his writing.

Expert Answers

An illustration of the letter 'A' in a speech bubbles

Shakespeare was clearly a Renaissance humanist, judging from the content of his plays. Renaissance humanism has two major prongs.

The first prong is the revival of Greco-Roman literature and arts. Humanism went beyond the Bible and stories from the Church, such as of the saints, as source material for literature and art, and leaned heavily into Classical examples. We can see that Shakespeare relied often on such Classical sources. He set plays such as Coriolanus, Julius Caesar, Antony and Cleopatra, and A Midsummer Night's Dream in the Classical world. He uses Classical writers, such as Ovid, for source material. Even plays set in Europe allude to Classical literature: the players that arrive at the Danish court in Hamlet , for example, know the story of the Trojan War, and Horatio is well aware of the omens that foretell the death of Julius Caesar and the start of a...

Unlock
This Answer Now

Start your 48-hour free trial and get ahead in class. Boost your grades with access to expert answers and top-tier study guides. Thousands of students are already mastering their assignments—don't miss out. Cancel anytime.

Get 48 Hours Free Access

civil war.

The second strand of Renaissance humanism is a belief in the great worth of human beings and the desire to cultivate and promote such virtues as kindness, courage, endurance, good sense, and mercy. In this strand, Shakespeare's humanism could hardly shine out more fully. His plays fully promote humanist values, and this is one reason we still read him. For example, in a speech to Rosencrantz—which is complicated because Hamlet is having mocking fun with Rosencrantz—Hamlet nevertheless espouses and summarizes the humanist philosophy and locates his depression in his divorce from it. He states:

What a piece of work is a man! How noble in reason, how infinite in faculty! In form and moving how express and admirable! In action how like an angel, in apprehension how like a god! The beauty of the world. The paragon of animals.

Shakespeare approves humanist values in his other plays as well. One example of many would be Portia in A Merchant of Venice, who gives a famous speech in support of the concept of mercy. Shakespeare also shows how he values all humans, including women (unlike the depressed Hamlet), by having Portia, disguised as a man, eloquently and successfully defend Antonio in court.

Approved by eNotes Editorial
An illustration of the letter 'A' in a speech bubbles

As with most speculation about William Shakespeare, the idea that his writing springs from a specific philosophy cannot be determined for certain. However, there is a body of evidence that Shakespeare used humanist ideas to inform his writing; humanist sources note that many of the characters speak disparagingly of religion and hold up Man over Gods in a manner inconsistent with the religious, spiritual, and superstitious beliefs of his era. One of the most important pieces of evidence for this stance is also one of Shakespeare's most famous lines:

This above all, – to thine own self be true;
And it must follow, as the night the day,
Thou canst not then be false to any man.
(Shakespeare, Hamlet, gutenberg.org)

This is line is explicitly pro-Man "above all," and can be interpreted as a warning against the habits of religion; if Man is loyal to God above all else, then it is hard to say what is inherently moral and what is simply blind faith. Instead, Polonius cautions to be true to the self, to one's own moral and ethical compass, and make all decisions based on personal principles of integrity. This is not an anti-religious statement, but it is a very pro-secular one, and similar lines in other plays hint that Shakespeare may have simply been a humanitarian, not necessarily a Humanist as defined by modern philosophy.

Approved by eNotes Editorial