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John Nathan

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

Opinion

Offensive, yes, but worth it

May 18, 2011 09:04
3 min read

Another season, another Shylock. This month the Royal Shakespeare Company once again revives Shakespeare's Jew play. Theatre companies tend not to do a great deal of soul searching about the offence that is guaranteed to be caused to Jews by staging The Merchant of Venice.

Unless a director happens to be Jewish, he or she might be unaware of what it is like to be a Jew, sitting among gentiles, watching a Jewish character created by a gentile sharpen his knife on the sole of his shoe before approaching the flesh of a Christian.

They presumably conclude that any offence, while regrettable, is a price worth paying.

And long may they do so. Because the only way to make the price too heavy would be to campaign for the play to be banned as some Christians did with Jerry Springer, The Opera, which they considered to be blasphemous; or riot as some Sikhs did with the play Bezhti, which they considered to be sacrilegious. And if you are for freedom of expression, banning plays is not a good look.