A comparison of Greenblatt’s own statements about Marlowe that unintentionally support Marlovian arguments — an analysis many readers find surprisingly illuminating. With the help of ChatGPT!
Greenblatt vs. the Marlowe/Shakespeare Hypothesis
Marlowe as the Revolutionary Inventor of Shakespearean Drama
Greenblatt says
—Marlowe transformed English theatre before Shakespeare. Shakespeare’s early works strongly imitate Marlowe. Blank verse power and heroic rhetoric originate with Marlowe.
If one writer suddenly appears using fully developed Marlovian technique, the question arises: How did Shakespeare master instantly what Marlowe invented?
Continuity of style reflects continuity of authorship.
Greenblatt must explain radical stylistic continuity without personal continuity.
Marlowe’s Intellectual Range
Greenblatt emphasizes:
Marlowe possessed extraordinary: —classical learning—-philosophical daring— theological skepticism —linguistic brilliance
He repeatedly describes Marlowe as intellectually exceptional even among playwrights.
The Stratford figure leaves little documented evidence of comparable education or literary activity.
Greenblatt separates: — documented intellectual biography (Marlowe). — undocumented literary genius (Shakespeare)
The Marlovian hypothesis removes this asymmetry by unifying them.
Espionage and Secret Service Connections
Greenblatt accepts:
Marlowe likely worked for Elizabethan intelligence networks.
This implies: — covert identities, — political protection, —secrecy operations
A person already embedded in covert state structures is capable of operating under concealed identities.
Greenblatt accepts espionage secrecy — but rejects extended secrecy after 1593.
The boundary is methodological, not evidential.
Dangerous Religious and Political Views
Greenblatt portrays Marlowe as: -suspected atheist, — politically dangerous thinker, under investigation shortly before death
In 1593 accusations of atheism could mean execution.
Disappearance could be safer than trial.
Greenblatt’s position: Death ends the danger.
Greenblatt acknowledges motive for disappearance but does not pursue it as a historical possibility.
The Strange Circumstances of the Death
Greenblatt admits: — unusual company present, —government-connected witnesses, — highly specific inquest narrative, — rapid bureaucratic closure
He calls the case mysterious but ultimately accepts it.
He simultaneously stresses: — Elizabethan political manipulation, — espionage culture, —surveillance state
yet treats the official record as transparent.
The Marlovian reading treats the same facts as signs of staging.
Shakespeare’s Sudden Emergence (1593–1594)
Greenblatt notes: Shakespeare rises precisely when Marlowe disappears.— The theatrical landscape suddenly changes.
One genius dies exactly when another (of the same age) appears fully
Psychological Continuity of Themes
Greenblatt repeatedly links Shakespearean themes to Marlovian ones: —ambition, —identity instability, — performance of self, power and transgression
He often writes as if Shakespeare is thinking through problems Marlowe began.
The development appears internally continuous rather than generational.
Greenblatt’s Own Concept of Self-Fashioning
Greenblatt’s famous concept:— self-fashioning — identity as something constructed and performed in Renaissance culture.
If identity is performative and strategic, then a writer adopting a sustained literary persona becomes historically conceivable.
Yet Greenblatt applies self-fashioning metaphorically, not biographically.
The Narrative Necessity of Separation
Greenblatt’s historical storytelling depends on:
- Marlowe = tragic precursor
- Shakespeare = fulfilled successor
This creates a powerful literary narrative arc. Accepting identity continuity would dissolve that structure.
Thus resistance is partly narrative coherence, not only evidence.
Core Structural Insight
Greenblatt’s scholarship simultaneously asserts:
- Elizabethan England was a world of surveillance, secrecy, and constructed identities.
- Marlowe lived inside that covert world.
- Shakespeare continues Marlowe’s artistic revolution seamlessly.
Yet Greenblatt maintains a strict boundary at 1593
because academic historiography prefers visible continuity over hidden continuity.
Conclusion
Greenblatt’s portrait of Marlowe unintentionally builds all of the preconditions required by the Marlovian hypothesis,
but his historical method prevents him from crossing the final interpretive step.
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