Shakespeare: Becoming Human
By Rudolf Steiner and A. Wolpert
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Rudolf Steiner
During the last two decades of the nineteenth century the Austrian-born Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925) became a respected and well-published scientific, literary, and philosophical scholar, particularly known for his work on Goethe's scientific writings. After the turn of the century, he began to develop his earlier philosophical principles into an approach to methodical research of psychological and spiritual phenomena. His multi-faceted genius has led to innovative and holistic approaches in medicine, science, education (Waldorf schools), special education, philosophy, religion, economics, agriculture, (Bio-Dynamic method), architecture, drama, the new art of eurythmy, and other fields. In 1924 he founded the General Anthroposophical Society, which today has branches throughout the world.
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Shakespeare - Rudolf Steiner
RUDOLF STEINER (1861–1925) called his spiritual philosophy ‘anthroposophy’, meaning ‘wisdom of the human being’. As a highly developed seer, he based his work on direct knowledge and perception of spiritual dimensions. He initiated a modern and universal ‘science of spirit’, accessible to anyone willing to exercise clear and unprejudiced thinking.
From his spiritual investigations Steiner provided suggestions for the renewal of many activities, including education (both general and special), agriculture, medicine, economics, architecture, science, philosophy, religion and the arts. Today there are thousands of schools, clinics, farms and other organizations involved in practical work based on his principles. His many published works feature his research into the spiritual nature of the human being, the evolution of the world and humanity, and methods of personal development. Steiner wrote some 30 books and delivered over 6000 lectures across Europe. In 1924 he founded the General Anthroposophical Society, which today has branches throughout the world.
pgiAbram Games © Estate of Abram Games 1975, reproduced by kind permission
SHAKESPEARE
BECOMING HUMAN
RUDOLF STEINER
Edited with an introduction by Andrew Wolpert
RUDOLF STEINER PRESS
Rudolf Steiner Press
Hillside House, The Square
Forest Row, RH18 5ES
www.rudolfsteinerpress.com
Published by Rudolf Steiner Press 2016
© Rudolf Steiner Press 2016
Introduction © Andrew Wolpert 2016
Earlier versions of the lectures by Rudolf Steiner have been published in the following volumes: lecture 1 in What is Necessary in These Urgent Times, SteinerBooks 2010, translated by Rory Bradley; lecture 2 in Old and New Methods of Initiation, Rudolf Steiner Press 1991, translated by Johanna Collis; lecture 3 in Waldorf Education and Anthroposophy, Vol. 1, Anthroposophic Press 1995, translator unknown
All rights reserved. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, electrical, chemical, mechanical, optical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner. Inquiries should be addressed to the Publishers
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Print book ISBN: 978 1 85584 524 4
Ebook ISBN: 978 1 85584 476 6
Cover by Morgan Creative featuring photo of sculpture © Tony Bagget
Typeset by DP Photosetting, Neath, West Glamorgan
Contents
Introduction
Affinities
Becoming human
Some references by Rudolf Steiner to Shakespeare
Commentary on lectures Rudolf Steiner gave in 1922
Lecture 1
Dornach, 1 February 1920
Lecture 2
Dornach, 24 February 1922
Lecture 3
Stratford-on-Avon, 23 April 1922
Rudolf Steiner's Report on the Stratford Shakespeare Festival in 1922
Editor's Acknowledgements
Introduction
Affinities
The love for Shakespeare and recognition I have for what he represents in our culture and in a world context arises directly out of my understanding of the whole impulse in Rudolf Steiner's work. The significance of the circumstances we are born into, the challenges of the inherited social structures, the emancipation and sovereignty of the individual, the courage for the truth, the meaning of evil, the spiritual context of our biography, the reality of forgiveness and reconciliation, the creation of a new social order, and the power of unconditional love, all these occur again and again in Shakespeare's work; their beauty and truth are universally acknowledged and enjoyed. The spiritual science that arises out of Rudolf Steiner's work allows all these soul-nourishing experiences also to become amenable to a level of conscious understanding, so that our engagement with the plays, not just as actors and directors, but also as students and members of an audience can become a co-creative participation in the redemptive potential of Shakespeare's work.
Rudolf Steiner describes the stages in our human evolution, the necessary separation from our spiritual origins, and the possibility of finding a new connection to the cosmos. He affirms again and again the pivotal cosmic-human-earthly event when a Divine Being incarnated into human life on earth. Christ experienced human earthly death, overcame the consequences of that, and brought to humanity the possibility of becoming free and creating a new connection to the spiritual world. Rudolf Steiner refers to these original Easter events as the Mystery of Golgotha. The reality of this turning point, everywhere explicit in anthroposophy, is everywhere implicit in Shakespeare's work. Its universally recognizable (and globally recognized) human appeal affirms the spiritual, essential humanness of Shakespeare's work that needs no explicit religious framework. This has an affinity with anthroposophy; here Christianity transcends the denominationalism of a Church and becomes a spiritual reality synonymous with nothing less than the truly human. This celebration of the human and our potential to achieve it is the very heart of Shakespeare's work. Anthroposophy is exactly this celebration of our becoming human, and at its heart is Christ, the Archetypal Human Being, who shows us through his Deed what we can become.
Rudolf Steiner spoke about the mighty events in the spiritual world that accompanied the beginnings of our modern age, the arts of the Renaissance in Europe, the development of science and technology, the beginnings of industrialization in Britain and the rise of materialism. He spoke about a gathering in the spiritual world of all those human and angelic beings who felt responsible for a coming period of culture on earth when it would be realized that the methods of natural science could be applied also to supersensible experiences. When the objective enquiry into external natural phenomena had taught us how to be scientists, we could apply that method of enquiry in the no less objective relationship we can develop to our inner experiences of soul and spirit. That is the basis of the epistemology of spiritual science, anthroposophy.
It becomes increasingly clear that so much of the art of the Renaissance, for example of Michelangelo, Raphael and Leonardo in Italy and of Shakespeare a hundred years later in Britain, comes from this momentous spiritual gathering, a great symposium, a school in heaven. Rudolf Steiner characterizes this as the cosmic source of an impulse that leads human beings on earth to a free and conscious knowing of our spiritual dimension, not a belief, but an understanding of reincarnation, destiny and a vision of our human potential.¹ This supersensible school was under the leadership of the Archangel Michael, one of whose chief concerns is that we should be free, and that we should know who we are and what we can achieve. All this art of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries is like an open secret, revealing in architecture, sculpture, painting, poetry and drama, for those who want to know, so much of what then comes in the twentieth century through the spiritual research of Rudolf Steiner. It is as if some of what Rudolf Steiner brings in the twentieth century in ideas, thoughts and words, primarily (but by no means exclusively) in language, had already been brought into public culture through the visual and stage arts more than 400 years before. Artists are prophets, and exactly where they appealed to our