David Bevington
David Martin Bevington was an American literary scholar. He was the Phyllis Fay Horton Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus in the Humanities and in English Language & Literature, Comparative Literature, and the College at the University of Chicago, where he taught since 1967, as well as chair of Theatre and Performance Studies. "One of the most learned and devoted of Shakespeareans," so called by Harold Bloom, he specialized in British drama of the Renaissance, and edited and introduced the complete works of William Shakespeare in both the 29-volume, Bantam Classics paperback editions and the single-volume Longman edition. After accomplishing this feat, Bevington was often cited as the only living scholar to have personally edited Shakespeare's complete corpus.
He also edited the Norton Anthology of Renaissance Drama and an important anthology of Medieval English Drama, the latter of which was just re-released by Hackett for the first time in nearly four decades. Bevington's editorial scholarship is so extensive that Richard Strier, an early modern colleague at the University of Chicago, was moved to comment: "Every time I turn around, he has edited a new Renaissance text. Bevington has endless energy for editorial projects." In addition to his work as an editor, he published studies of Shakespeare, Christopher Marlowe, and the Stuart Court Masque, among others, though it is for his work as an editor that he is primarily known.
Despite formally retiring, Bevington continued to teach and publish. Most recently he authored Shakespeare and Biography, a study of the history of Shakespearean biography and of such biographers, as well as Murder Most Foul: Hamlet Through the Ages. In August, 2012, after a decade of research, he released the first complete edition of Ben Jonson published in over a half-century with Ian Donaldson and Martin Butler from the Cambridge Press. In addition to his preeminence among scholars of William Shakespeare, he was a much beloved teacher, winning a Quantrell Award in 1979.
Biography
Early life and education
David Bevington was born to Merle M. and Helen Bevington, and grew up in Manhattan, and from age eleven, North Carolina, when his parents, themselves both academics, finished graduate school at Columbia University and went on to join the faculty at Duke. After attending Phillips Exeter Academy from 1945-8, before it was co-educational, he graduated from Harvard University cum laude in 1952, before entering the navy that year, and becoming a lieutenant junior grade before his leaving in 1955. He saw much of the Mediterranean, though neither Israel nor Turkey. Upon his return to Harvard, he pursued an M.A. and Ph.D., receiving them respectively in 1957 and 1959. Surprisingly, he was well into the graduate process before settling on the Renaissance; he had intended to study the Victorian until a Shakespeare seminar convinced him otherwise.Teaching and fellowships
During the doctoral process, he was a teaching fellow at Harvard. When he was granted the final degree, his title changed to instructor. He held this post until 1961, when he became Assistant Professor of English at the University of Virginia; he then became Associate Professor in 1964, and Professor in 1966. In 1967, he was a visiting Professor at the University of Chicago for a year, and joined the faculty as Professor in 1968. In 1985 he was appointed to the Phyllis Fay Horton distinguished service professorship in the humanities, a post he held continuously thereafter.In 1963, he served as visiting professor at New York University's summer school; he filled that capacity at Harvard's summer school in 1967, at the University of Hawaii in 1970, and at Northwestern University in 1974.
In 1979, Bevington was honored with the Llewellyn John and Harriet Manchester Quantrell Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching. The Quantrell Award, for which students of the college nominate their instructors, is considered among the highest accolades the University of Chicago confers, and the most treasured by the faculty.
Bevington served as senior consultant and seminar leader at the Folger Institute in Renaissance and 18th-century Studies from 1976–77 and 1987-88. He has had two Guggenheim fellowships, first in 1964-65, and again in 1981-82. He was a senior fellow at the Southeastern Institute of Medieval and Renaissance Studies during the summer of 1975. He was appointed the 2006-2007 Lund-Gill Chair in Rosary College of Arts and Sciences at Dominican University in River Forest, Illinois.
Consistently, Bevington was the instructor of a two-part History and Theory of Drama sequence. This course was co-taught with actor/translator Nicholas Rudall, dramaturg Drew Dir, Director of Undergraduate Studies in Theater and Performance Studies Heidi Coleman, and actor David New. It is now taught by Professor John Muse, a transition which first occurred when Bevington chose to decrease his teaching hours and focus on Shakespeare-centric classes. The first quarter of this course spans drama from Greek drama to the Renaissance. The second quarter begins with Ibsen's A Doll's House and ends with the postmodern, including Beckett's Endgame and the work of Pinter and Caryl Churchill. For midterms and finals, students either write a paper critically analyzing a play, or else perform scenes from plays relevant to the course. Bevington required, from those opting to perform, a reflection paper analyzing the challenges of staging the scene.
Bevington also taught courses entitled "Shakespeare: Histories and Comedies," surveying such plays as Richard II, Richard III, Henry IV, Part 1, Henry V, Much Ado About Nothing, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Twelfth Night, and Measure for Measure; "Shakespeare: Tragedies and Romances"; and "Shakespeare's History Plays"; among others. When Bevington was not instructing these courses, they were often led by his fellow professors Richard Strier, John Muse, or Tim Harrison. Bevington usually spent Spring Quarter with B.A. theses he advised, and the corresponding students, or else traveled. However, he was also known to sign up for introductory-level courses in subjects vastly different from his own.
When possible, Bevington opted to teach class in the large Edward M. Sills Seminar Room, which features a large, oval table accommodating several dozen, rather than in a more traditional classroom in which all the students might face a lectern. He felt this format fosters greater participation and discussion among students, and went out of his way to encourage the sharing of ideas and opinions. However, because so many students elected to take his popular classes, the room at times became overfull.
He taught a number of other courses:
- Shakespeare at the Opera
- Skepticism and Sexuality in Shakespeare
- The Young Shakespeare and the Drama that he Knew
- Shakespeare in the Mediterranean
- British Theatre
- Renaissance Drama
Memberships and honors
He belonged to a number of academic organizations:
- American Association of University Professors
- Shakespeare Association of America
- Renaissance English Text Society
- Modern Language Association of America
- Renaissance Society of America
Personal life
He died on August 2, 2019 at the age of 88.
Selected bibliography
Although the following does not boast of being complete, it includes the vast majority of Bevington's publications sorted into three lists: books he has authored, plays/anthologies thereof he has edited, and anthologies of scholarly essays he edited.Authored
- From "Mankind" to Marlowe: Growth of Structure in the Popular Drama of Tudor England
- Tudor Drama and Politics: A Critical Approach to Topical Meaning
- Shakespeare AHM Pub. Corp., 1978.
- Action Is Eloquence: Shakespeare's Language of Gesture
- Homo, Memento Finis: The Iconography of Just Judgment in Medieval Art and Drama. Western Michigan Univ Medieval Press.
- Shakespeare: The Seven Ages of Human Experience
- The Theatrical City: Culture, Theatre and Politics in London, 1576-1649, with David L. Smith and Richard Strier
- Shakespeare: Script, Stage, Screen
- How to Read a Shakespeare Play, part of the How to Study Literature series
- This Wide and Universal Theater: Shakespeare in Performance, Then and Now
- Shakespeare's Ideas: More Things in Heaven and Earth
- Shakespeare and Biography
- Murder Most Foul: Hamlet Through the Ages
- The Works of Ben Jonson
As editor of drama
Bantam Classics
The Bantam Classics series, self-touted as "The most student-friendly Shakespeare on the market," is different from, for instance, Bevington's Oxford and Arden editions of Henry IV and Troilus and Cressida in not so much scholarship, but intended audience. A high-school student finds Bantam straightforward, on the whole, because its glossary explains all words that might be obscure or different in meaning from their present use. The latter two, however, assume an audience already somewhat versed in the idiomatic dialect of Elizabethan England.In addition to the many individual volumes listed below, there have been collected anthologies of Shakespeare plays. A few of these Bantam anthologies contain plays that are unavailable from Bantam in their solo form. The anthologies are as follows:
- Four Tragedies: Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth
- Four Comedies: The Taming of the Shrew, A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Merchant of Venice, Twelfth Night
- The Late Romances: Pericles, Cymbeline, The Winter's Tale and The Tempest
- Three Early Comedies: Love's Labour's Lost, The Two Gentlemen of Verona, The Merry Wives of Windsor
- Three Classical Tragedies: Titus Andronicus, Timon of Athens, Coriolanus
- Measure for Measure, All's Well that Ends Well, Troilus and Cressida
Comedies:
- The Comedy of Errors
- Much Ado About Nothing
- A Midsummer Night's Dream
- Twelfth Night
- The Merchant of Venice
- As You Like It
- The Taming of the Shrew
- The Tempest
- Henry IV, Part 1
- Henry IV, Part 2
- Henry V
- Henry VI
- Richard II
- Richard III
- King John and Henry VIII published as one volume.
- Romeo and Juliet
- Hamlet
- Othello
- King Lear
- Macbeth
- Antony and Cleopatra
- Julius Caesar
Longman
- Shakespeare's Comedies, Bevington Shakespeare Series
- Shakespeare's Tragedies, Bevington Shakespeare Series
- Shakespeare's Histories, Bevington Shakespeare Series
- Shakespeare's Romances and Poems, Bevington Shakespeare Series
-
Revels Plays and Student Editions
- The New Inn
- The Jew of Malta
- Endymion
- Tamburlaine The Great
- Volpone
- Plays on Women: A Chaste Maid in Cheapside, The Roaring Girl, Arden of Faversham, and A Woman Killed With Kingness
- Campaspe and Sappho and Phao
- Doctor Faustus
- Galatea and Midas
Others
- ', Wadsworth Publishing
- Richard II, Signet Classics
- '
- ', A Norton Anthology
- Antony and Cleopatra
- The Spanish Tragedy
- Doctor Faustus and Other Plays, a Marlowe collection leaving out an early play whose authenticity is controversial, and a late play, which has survived only fragmentally.
- ', of Oxford World Classics' The Oxford Shakespeare
- The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Ben Jonson
Other scholarship
As editor
- Twentieth Century Interpretations of Hamlet, Prentice Hall Trade
- An Introduction to Shakespeare, Scott, Foresman
- Shakespeare: Pattern of Excelling Nature, Associated University Presses
- Henry IV, Parts I and II: Critical Essays, Garland
- The Politics of the Stuart Court Masque, with Peter Holbrook
As contributor
- 'Bring Furth the Pagants': Essays in Early English Drama