During the Romantic era , Shakespeare was praised by the poet and literary philosopher Samuel Taylor Coleridge ; and the critic August Wilhelm Schlegel translated his plays in the spirit of German Romanticism . [163] In the nineteenth century, critical admiration for Shakespeare's genius often bordered on adulation. [164] "That King Shakespeare," the essayist Thomas Carlyle wrote in 1840, "does not he shine, in crowned sovereignty, over us all, as the noblest, gentlest, yet strongest of rallying signs; indestructible". [165] The Victorians produced his plays as lavish spectacles on a grand scale. [166] The playwright and critic George Bernard Shaw mocked the cult of Shakespeare worship as " bardolatry ". He claimed that the new naturalism of Ibsen's plays had made Shakespeare obsolete. [167]
The modernist revolution in the arts during the early twentieth century, far from discarding Shakespeare, eagerly enlisted his work in the service of the avant garde . The Expressionists in Germany and the Futurists in Moscow mounted productions of his plays. Marxist playwright and director Bertolt Brecht devised an epic theatre under the influence of Shakespeare. The poet and critic T. S. Eliot argued against Shaw that Shakespeare's "primitiveness" in fact made him truly modern. [168] Eliot, along with G. Wilson Knight and the school of New Criticism , led a movement towards a closer reading of Shakespeare's imagery. In the 1950s, a wave of new critical approaches replaced modernism and paved the way for "post-modern" studies of Shakespeare. [169] By the eighties, Shakespeare studies were open to movements such as structuralism , feminism , African American studies , and queer studies . [170] |