ABSTRACT
Studies on William Shakespeare‟s writings have been fragmentary concentrating on one or two aspects of Shakespeare‟s concern with aestheticizing human values without laying emphasis on his sources of inspiration. This paper is a comparative study of some of Shakespeare‟s plays through an elaborate, if subliminal, intertextual dialogue with several key epic poems by Al-Moutanabi. This paper strives to foreground the trope of anxiety of influence‟ (Harold Bloom) unearthing links between AlMoutanabi and Shakespeare. The literary dialogue between both writers clears the ground for a strong assumption of intertextual evocations. In this regard, Khalil Matran asserts that: “on the whole, there is in the writing of Shakespeare a Beduin spirit, which is expressed in the continuous return to innate nature” (8). Accordingly, I must proceed on three levels: I must first situate Shakespeare‟s and Al-Moutanabi‟s writings in a broader field of intertextuality by dissecting convergences between their texts. Second, my comparative approach will elucidate Shakespeare‟s divergences at the level of generic affiliations. Finally, I will appraise the trope of „anxiety of influence‟ since it confers cross-cultural characterisitics on Shakespeare‟s writings.