Shakespeare and the Hazards of Ambition. Cambridge,
MA: Harvard Univ. Press, 1984.
What is ambition, and what are its consequences, in Shakespearean
drama?
This compelling interpretation of eight major plays reveals
a Shakespeare who understands ambition as a doomed but necessary struggle
against the limitations of the inherited self. Through vivid new
readings of such crucial moments as Henry V's rejection of Falstaff, Macbeth's
defeat by the advancing Birnam Wood, and Coriolanus' crisis at the gates
of Rome, Robert Watson delineates a patttern of poetic justice whereby
characters who disdain their places in nature's system forfeit the benefits
that nature normally offers. Watson also amends the insights of psychoanalytic
critics by demonstrating that Shakespeare uses Oedipal impulses and unnatural
births as metaphors for the forbidden act of remaking the self: conceiving
a new identity entails a symbolically incestuous defiance of the father's
authority.
By tracing the evolution of this Shakespearean myth of ambition
and exploring its analogues in many less familiar Renaissance texts, Watson
illuminates the ethical perspective of the playwright and provides a bold
new approach to the sexual symbolism of the plays. The persistence
of the mythic pattern across diferent types of play (history, tragedy,
and romance) and different modes of aspiration (political, martial, and
spiritual) indicates that Shakespeare perceives ambition as a moral and
dramatic problem in its own right, with its own special properties and
its own weighty ambiguities.