The intention of this paper is to bring sustained scholarly attention, for the first time, to the character of the old Shepherd in William Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale. Hence, it shares a recent critical interest in re-examining the lives and experiences of the culturally marginal and the historically forgotten.
By exploring this rarely discussed figure, my paper will attempt fill to a void within the field of Shakespearean Studies. Any reader who wants to understand The Winter’s Tale better, I would argue, will benefit from exploring a character whose behavior shapes, in crucial ways, Shakespeare’s retelling of the play’s source material. It is particularly important to explore in detail the way in which Shakespeare entrusted this character with the role of resolving the multi-dimensional patriarchal crisis that sits at the heart of this Jacobean text. Shakespeare juxtaposes the ‘simplicity’ of this character to the courtly value of “gentility,” a choice that, I argue, ultimately offers the early-modern audience of the Globe a figure to look up to.
Analysis will first consider Louis Adrian Montrose’s critique of the patriarchal politics of gentility and then move on to expand it, by exercising a sociological reading of what Pierre Bourdieu would call the “disposition” of this octogenarian petit master. The purpose is to reveal how the Shepherd emerges as a figure that speaks to the anxieties and the aspirations of an audience whose past, current and future fortunes and misfortunes were highly dependent on the whims of their own fathers, patrons, tutors and masters. In contrast to the other masters/fathers in the play, the Shepherd’s unnoted performance as head of a precariously situated but steadily advancing household both prepares us for and explains to us why Perdita’s guardian is ironically celebrated as the “conduit of many king’s reigns.”