Shakespeare as Literary DramatistIn this groundbreaking study, Lukas Erne argues that Shakespeare, apart from being a playwright who wrote theatrical texts for the stage, was also a literary dramatist who produced reading texts for the page. The usual distinction that has been set up between Ben Jonson on the one hand, carefully preparing his manuscripts for publication, and Shakespeare the man of the theatre, writing for his actors and audience, indifferent to his plays as literature, is questioned in this book. Examining the evidence from early published playbooks, Erne argues that Shakespeare wrote many of his plays with a readership in mind and that these 'literary' texts would have been abridged for the stage because they were too long for performance. The variant early texts of Romeo and Juliet, Henry V, and Hamlet are shown to reveal important insights into the different media for which Shakespeare designed his plays. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 41
Page 1
... contains Shakespeare's Sonnets 138 and 144 , several scholars who failed to recognize that the phrase " and hee to doe himselfe right , hath since published them in his owne name " is syntactically subordinated to " may put the world in ...
... contains Shakespeare's Sonnets 138 and 144 , several scholars who failed to recognize that the phrase " and hee to doe himselfe right , hath since published them in his owne name " is syntactically subordinated to " may put the world in ...
Page 5
... contains , And that is this , and this with thee remains . The poem sharply distinguishes between " that " ( the perishable body ) and " this " ( the poetry we are reading ) , poetry being " the better part of me " which 5 Note ...
... contains , And that is this , and this with thee remains . The poem sharply distinguishes between " that " ( the perishable body ) and " this " ( the poetry we are reading ) , poetry being " the better part of me " which 5 Note ...
Page 14
... contains forty - two titles of which eight are plays : " Orlando Furioso , comedie , " " Romeo and Julieta , tragedie , " " Loues Labors Lost , comedie , " " The Malcontent , comedie , " " A Midsommers Nights Dreame , comedie ...
... contains forty - two titles of which eight are plays : " Orlando Furioso , comedie , " " Romeo and Julieta , tragedie , " " Loues Labors Lost , comedie , " " The Malcontent , comedie , " " A Midsommers Nights Dreame , comedie ...
Page 17
... containing them was published . The copy in the Folger Shakespeare Library bears the ( probably genuine ) manuscript signature " Wm Wordsworth " on the title page , and we would perhaps not be greatly surprised if the anthology 53 See ...
... containing them was published . The copy in the Folger Shakespeare Library bears the ( probably genuine ) manuscript signature " Wm Wordsworth " on the title page , and we would perhaps not be greatly surprised if the anthology 53 See ...
Page 24
... contain substantially more than what would have been performed by Shakespeare and his fellows . Lamb and Goethe may have been right insofar as several of the versions that have come down to us were in fact intended for the page . In a ...
... contain substantially more than what would have been performed by Shakespeare and his fellows . Lamb and Goethe may have been right insofar as several of the versions that have come down to us were in fact intended for the page . In a ...
Contents
The legitimation of printed playbooks in Shakespeares time | 31 |
The making of Shakespeare | 56 |
Shakespeare and the publication of his plays I the late sixteenth century | 78 |
Shakespeare and the publication of his plays II the early seventeenth century | 101 |
The players alleged opposition to print | 115 |
TEXTS | 129 |
Why size matters the two hours traffic of our stage and the length of Shakespeares plays | 131 |
Editorial policy and the length of Shakespeares plays | 174 |
Bad quartos and their origins Romeo and Juliet Henry V and Hamlet | 192 |
Theatricality literariness and the texts of Romeo and Juliet Henry V and Hamlet | 220 |
The plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries in print 15841623 | 245 |
Heminge and Condells Stolne and surreptitious copies and the Pavier quartos | 255 |
Shakespeare and the circulation of dramatic manuscripts | 259 |
262 | |
278 | |
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Common terms and phrases
abridgement acted actors Andrew Gurr anonymous appeared argued argument Beaumont and Fletcher Bibliography Blayney Cambridge University Press chapter Clarendon Press comedies copy dramatist Edward England evidence extant Folio text Greg Gurr Hamlet hath haue Heminge and Condell Henry Heywood Ibid John Jonson King Lear King's King's Men length Library lines literary London long texts Lord Chamberlain's Lord Chamberlain's Men Love's Labour's Lost manuscript playbooks memorial reconstruction Merry Wives modern omitted Oxford University Press passages Pavier play's players playhouse playtexts playwrights poems printed playbooks printer private transcripts Publication of Playbooks quarto of Hamlet quarto of Romeo quote readers revision Richard Richard III Robert Romeo and Juliet scene scholars script second quarto seems seventeenth century Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare's plays Shrew sixteenth Sonnets Spanish Tragedy Stationers Studies suggests Tamburlaine Textual Companion theater Thomas title pages Troilus and Cressida W. W. Greg William Shakespeare written
Popular passages
Page 5 - But be contented : when that fell arrest Without all bail shall carry me away, My life hath in this line some interest, Which for memorial still with thee shall stay.