Textual Shakespeare: Writing and the WordUniv of Hertfordshire Press, 2003 - 311 sayfa Reviewing debates in textual theory and practice, this examination concludes that Shakespeare is not a writer but a collection of documents. The argument is presented that modern Shakespeare editions are radical rewritings and that contemporary textual theory opens the way to much more inventive textual activities of reconstruction and translation. This book draws on a wide range of sources, from classical poetry and deconstructionist theory to Anglo-Saxon verse and modern bibliographical scholarship. |
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authentic Bad Quarto Bibliography Bryan Loughrey century Chapter Claudius collaborative conflated contemporary context copy Cordelia corruption Derrida dramatic early modern early printed texts Edgar editorial evidence Faber facsimile Folio text Forman's Fortinbras Gary Taylor ghost Graham Holderness Grazia and Stallybrass Greetham Hamlet Prince Hemel Hempstead Henry the Fift Heppenstall Historie of Hamlet Holinshed interpretation Jacobean Jacques Derrida Janet Dillon Jerome McGann Kastan King Lear language Lear plays literary London Macb Macbeth Marx material McGann meaning mediaeval memorial reconstruction modern editions multiple narrative Oxford Shakespeare performance play's poem post-structuralist practice present Prince of Denmarke published Quarto text quoted reader reading restoration revision romance scene scholars scholarship Shake Shakespeare's play Shakespearean Originals Shakespearean text Simon Forman Spectres stage Stephen Greenblatt Stoppard story textual criticism textual theory textualisation theatre theatrical tion Tom Stoppard tradition tragedy Tragicall Historie translated true chronicle historie William Shakespeare words writing