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A new debate has broken out between some of the world's top Shakespeare experts over whether the playwright's sonnets prove he was attracted to men.ÔÚÊÀ½ç¶¥¼¶É¯Ê¿±ÈÑÇѧÕßÖм䣬һ¸öеÄÓßÂÛÕ¨¿ªÁ˹ø£ºÕâλ¾ç×÷¼ÒµÄÊ®ËÄÐÐÊ«ÊDz»ÊÇÔÚ°µÊ¾Ëû±»ÄÐÐÔËùÎüÒý×Å£¿
Sir Brian Vickers, a visiting professor at University College London, began the row by condemning a book review which suggested Sonnet 116 appears in a 'primarily homosexual context'Â×¶Ø´óѧѧԺµÄ¿Í×ù½ÌÊÚ²¼À³¶÷¡¤Íþ¿Ë˹¾ôÊ¿µÚÒ»¸ö¶Ô´ËÂÛµ÷Ìá³ö»³ÒÉ£¬ËûÅê»÷ÁËÒ»±¾½â¶Áɯʿ±ÈÑÇÊ®ËÄÐÐÊ«µÄµÚ116Êס°Ê×ÏÈÊÇÒ»¸öͬÐÔÁµÎı¾¡±µÄÊéÆÀ¡£
In a letter to the Times Literary Supplement, he said the claim was 'anachronistic' because scholars now accept there were forms of rhetoric that allowed men to express love without implying sexual attraction.ÔÚд¸ø¡¶Ì©ÎîÊ¿±¨ÎÄѧÔö¿¯¡·µÄÐÅÖУ¬Ëû˵µÀ£¬ÒòΪÈç½ñѧÕß¶¼³ÐÈÏ£¬ÔÚ²»±íÃ÷ÐÔÏòµÄʱºò£¬ÓÐÒ»Ð©ÌØ¶¨µÄÐÞ´ÇÓÃÀ´±í´ï¶ÔÄÐÐԵİ®Ò⣬ÕâÖÖÂÛµ÷ÊÇ¡°²»ºÏʱÒ˵ġ±¡£
He also said that any attempt to find biographical information in the sonnets was doomed because Shakespeare was a professional who wrote under the identity of a 'poet-persona'.ËûҲ˵µÀ£¬ÈκÎÊÔͼÔÚÊ®ËÄÐÐÊ«ÖÐѰÕÒ´«¼ÇÐÅÏ¢µÄÆóͼ¶¼ÊÇ×¢¶¨Ê§°ÜµÄ£¬ÒòΪɯʿ±ÈÑÇÊǸöרҵµÄ´ø×Å¡°Ê«ÈËÃæ¾ß¡±Ð´×÷µÄÈË¡£
Fellow academics have since hit back at Mr Vickers' comments, accusing him of promoting 'one of the great fallacies of modern Shakespeare criticism'.ËæºóµÄһЩѧÕß¿ªÊ¼¹¥»÷Íþ¿Ë˹µÄÂÛµ÷£¬Ö¸¿ØËûÔÚ´«²¥¡°Ò»¸öÏÖ´úɯʿ±ÈÑÇÆÀÂÛ½çµÄ´óÃýÎ󡱡£
Scholar Arthur Freeman, who described himself as a 'friendly acquaintance' of Mr Vickers when responding to him via the letters page, accused him of introducing 'presuppositions that many of us would question, if not reject out of hand'.ÑÇɪ¡¤¸¥ÀïÂüѧÕߣ¬Éù³Æ×Ô¼ºÊÇÍþ¿Ë˹ÏÈÉúµÄ¡°ÓÑÈË¡±£¬ÔÚÐÅÉÏÖ¸¿ØËû¡°ÔÙ²»×¡Êֵϰ£¬ÎÒÃǶ¼Òª¶ÔÄãµÄ¼ÙÉèÌá³ö»³ÒÉÁË¡±¡£
He wrote: 'I cannot think of any responsible editor ... who would dismiss the premise of homosexual, as well as heterosexual passion pervading [the sonnets].ËûдµÀ£º¡°ÎÒ²»ÄÜÏëµ½ÈκÎһλÓÐÔðÈεı༡¡ÔÚ¶Á×ÅÕâЩÃÖÂþÁËÒìÐÔÁµÈÈÇéµÄÊ®ËÄÐÐʫʱ£¬»á¶ÔͬÐÔÁµÕâ¸öǰÌáÖÃÖ®²»Àí¡£
'Why should Shakespeare alone be thought so committed to the "negative capability" of his dramatic craft that all his most personal writings are treated as potentially artificial?¡°ÎªÊ²Ã´É¯Ê¿±ÈÑÇËùÓиöÈË×÷Æ·¶¼Òª±»È϶¨ÓÐÈ˹¤ºÏ³ÉµÄ¿ÉÄÜÐÔ£¬²¢ËûÕâЩϷ¾çÐÔµÄ×÷Æ·±»ÈÏΪÊÇÓµÓÐÁË¡°Ïû¼«µÄ²ÅÄÜ¡±£¿

¡®And even if we insist on regarding the sonnets, wholly or in part, as a kind of long-term dramatic narrative ... why on earth would Shakespeare choose so often to impersonate a pathetically ageing, balding, lame and vulnerable bisexual suitor, abjectly whingeing about rejection and betrayal ¡ª unless the self-humiliation that surfaces again and again through these particulars were both genuine and cathartic?'¡°¶øÇÒ¼´Ê¹ÎÒÃÇÕâôÈ϶¨ËûµÄÊ®ËÄÐÐÊ«£¨È«²¿»ò²¿·Ö£©£¬×÷ΪһÖÖ³¤Ê±¼äµÄ³äÂúÏ·¾çÐÔµÄÐðÊ¡¡¾¿¾¹ÎªºÎɯʿ±ÈÑÇҪѡÔñÈç´ËƵ·±µÄÈ¥°çÑÝÒ»¸ö¿É±¯µÄ£¬Íº×ÅÍ·£¬õË׎ţ¬´àÈõÇÒ´¹´¹ÀÏÒÓµÄË«ÐÔÁµµÄÆðËßÈË£¬±¯²ÒµØ±§Ô¹×žܾøºÍ±³ÅÑ¡ª¡ª³ý·Çͨ¹ýÕâЩϸ½Ú¿ÉÒÔ¿´³öÆäÒ»´ÎÓÖÒ»´Î¸¡³öË®ÃæµÄ×Ô±°Çé½á£¬ÊÇÕæÊµ¿ÉÐŵġ£¡±
Mr Vickers responded by saying he could not stop people from speculating, adding: 'Thought is free.Íþ¿Ë˹ÏÈÉú»ØÓ¦µÀ£¬Ëû²»ÄÜ×èÖ¹ÈËÃǵIJÂÏ룬²¢²¹³äµÀ£º¡°Ò»Ç§ÈËÐÄÖÐÓÐһǧ¸ö¹þÄ·À×ÌØ¡£
'But if you fix these codes and then say that his 126 poems are like this, then people stop reading them as poems. They read them as biographical documents, looking for imputed sexuality.'¡°µ«ÊÇÈç¹ûÄã¾À½áÓÚÕâЩ°µÊ¾£¬²¢ÇÒÈ϶¨ËûµÄ126Ê×Ê«¶¼ÊÇÈç´Ë£¬ÄÇôÈËÃǾͲ»»á°ÑËûµÄÊ«µ±×÷Ê«£¬¶øÊÇ×÷Ϊ´«¼ÇÎÄÏ׿ªÊ¼Ñ°ÕÒÐÔÏòµÄÖëË¿Âí¼£¡£¡±
Although there are few references to anything other than noble love, some sonnets appear more explicit than others.ËäÈ»Ãèд¸ßÉа®ÇéµÄÎÄÏ×ûÓкܶ࣬һЩʮËÄÐÐÊ«ÏÔ¶µÄ»¹ÊÇ±ÈÆäËûÒªÃ÷ÏÔ¡£
Sonnet 20 is largely interpreted as being dedicated to a man, declaring: 'A woman's face with nature's own hand painted / Hast thou, the master mistress of my passion.'Ê®ËÄÐÐÊ«µÚ20Ê×£¬ºÜÆÕ±éµÄ±»ÈÏΪÊÇרд¸øÄÐÈ˵쬯äдµÀ£º¡°ÔìÎïÊÖ»æÄãÅ®ÐÔµÄÁ³ÅÓ£ÄãÊÇÎÒÖÓ°®µÄ½¿½¿Ì´ÀÉ£¡¡±
In 2012, Shakespearean actor Sir Ian McKellen boldly announced that there was absolutely 'no doubt' the bard was bisexual.ÔÚ2012Ä꣬°çÑÝɯʿ±ÈÑǵÄÑÝÔ±ÒÁ¶÷¡¤Âó¿ËÀ³¶÷¾ôÊ¿´óµ¨Ðû³Æ£¬¡°ºÁÎÞÒÉÎÊ¡±ÕâλÒ÷ÓÎÊ«ÈËÊÇË«ÐÔÁµ¡£
The 75-year-old thespian said he came to his conclusion after studying the English poet's work.Õâλ75Ëê¸ßÁäµÄÑÝÔ±Éù³Æ×Ô¼ºÔÚÑо¿ÕâλӢ¹úÊ«È˵ľÞ×÷ºóµÃ³öÁËÕâ¸ö½áÂÛ¡£
At the time, he said: 'I'd say Shakespeare slept with men.µ±Ê±Ëû˵µÀ£º¡°ÎÒ¸Ò˵Ëû¿Ï¶¨ºÍÄÐÈË˯¹ý¡£
'The Merchant of Venice, centering on how the world treats gays as well as Jews, has a love triangle between an older man, younger man and a woman.¡°ÔÚ¡¶ÍþÄá˹ÉÌÈË¡·ÖУ¬Æä×ÚÖ¼·ÅÔÚ˵Ã÷È«ÊÀ½çÔõÑùÏñ¶Ô´ýÓÌÌ«ÈËÒ»Ñù¶Ô´ýͬÐÔÁµ£¬ÇÒÔÚÒ»¸öÀÏÈË£¬Ò»¸öÇàÄêºÍÒ»¸öÅ®ÈËÖдæÔÚÈý½Ç¹ØÏµ¡£
'And the complexity in his comedies with cross-dressing and disguises is immense.¡¯¡°¶øÇÒÔÚËûµÄϲ¾çÖÐÒì×°ñ±ºÍ»¯×±·Ç³£³£¼û¡£¡±
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