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Shakespeare's modern collaborators (Shakespeare Now)

✍ Scribed by Lukas Erne


Publisher
Continuum
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Leaves
142
Series
Shakespeare Now
Edition
First Edition
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Recent work in Shakespeare studies has brought to the forefront a variety of ways in which the collaborative nature of Shakespearean drama can be investigated: collaborative performance (Shakespeare and his fellow actors); collaborative writing (Shakespeare and his co-authors); collaborative textual production (Shakespeare and his transcribers and printers). What this leaves unaccounted for is the form of collaboration that affects more than any other our modern reading experience of Shakespeare's plays: what we read as Shakespeare now always comes to us in the form of a collaborative enterprise - and is decisively shaped by the nature of the collaboration - between Shakespeare and his modern editors. Contrary to much recent criticism, this book suggests that modern textual mediators have a positive rather than negative role: they are not simply 'pimps of discourse' or cultural tyrants whose oppressive interventions we need to 'unedit' but collaborators who can decisively shape and enable our response to Shakespeare's plays. Erne argues that any reader of Shakespeare, scholar, student, or general reader, approaches Shakespeare through modern editions that have an endlessly complicated and fascinating relationship to what Shakespeare may actually have intended and written, that modern editors determine what that relationship is, and that it is generally a very good thing that they do so.

✦ Table of Contents


Title......Page 4
Copyright......Page 5
Contents......Page 6
Acknowledgements......Page 8
General Editors' Preface......Page 10
Introduction......Page 14
1 Establishing the Text......Page 26
2 Framing the Text......Page 56
3 Editing Stage Action......Page 72
4 Editing the Real Lear......Page 100
Conclusion......Page 116
Abbreviations......Page 120
Notes......Page 124
Index......Page 138


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