September-October
2003
"Staking Claims in Cyberspace"
As a scholar, James D. Boyle,
William Neal Reynolds Professor of law, focuses primarily
on intellectual-property law.
At a Duke Magazine campus
forum in 2003, he discussed his work protecting the
“intellectual ecology” of the public domain. Last year,
with two others, he published a legal comic book about
the interface of copyright and documentary film.
But his latest project harks back to an interest he’s
long pursued on the side. In 1987, Boyle argued in
a public mock trial before a panel consisting of Supreme
Court Justices William H. Brennan Jr., Harry A. Blackmun,
and John Paul Stevens, 900 observers, and a national
television audience, that William Shakespeare, and
not Edward de Vere, the seventeenth Earl of Oxford,
was the true author of the Shakespearean canon. The
mock trial was covered on the front page of The New
York Times and sparked a New Yorker feature story.
The extraordinary level of interest in the event, as
well as the nature of the conspiracy theories he unearthed
in preparing his brief—and the vehemence with which
they were put forth by their proponents—inspired Boyle
to write The Shakespeare Chronicles: A Novel, a literary
mystery about one man’s obsessive search for the true
author of Shakespeare’s works.
The Shakespeare Chronicles jumps between Elizabethan
England and a contemporary love affair, following English
professor Stanley Quandary on his quest for the real
Shakespeare. Quandary’s interest is sparked by a bizarrely
detailed series of historical dreams. His growing obsession
leads him to travel to Britain to find the truth his
research suggests—in Shakespeare’s tomb if necessary.
Between Elizabethan conspiracies and contemporary conflicts,
the book has its share of drama. There are murders,
cover-ups, and illicit love affairs, as well as plagiarism,
arson, and professional disgrace. Boyle’s real interest
is in the motivations behind both Shakespearean defenders
and the “heretics”—the name proudly worn by those who
do not believe William from Stratford was the true
author.
“On the heretical side, there is a real sense that
this is a wrong that needs to be vindicated—that Shakespeare
was either a front man who was never supposed to keep
the credit, or a necessary illusion supposed to be
uncovered in time—that the true author was compelled
for some reason to conceal his identity during his
lifetime, but left clues for the truth eventually to
emerge.”
Boyle spent many years crafting The Shakespeare Chronicles.
“It was something I kept coming back to. The stories
are so good, the conspiracies and intrigues so labyrinthine
that I really felt it needed a novel, rather than a
history book.”
The book is available in hardcover, in paperback, and
as an eBook.
www.shakespearechronicles.com
—Jacob Dagger
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