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Shakespeare’s Queer Analytics: Distant Reading and Collaborative Intimacy in 'Love’s Martyr'

✍ Scribed by Don Rodrigues


Publisher
Bloomsbury Arden Shakespeare
Year
2022
Tongue
English
Leaves
305
Series
Arden Shakespeare Studies in Language and Digital Methodologies
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


What led Shakespeare to write his most cryptic poem, 'The Phoenix and Turtle'? Could the Phoenix represent Queen Elizabeth, on the verge of death as Shakespeare wrote? Is the Earl of Essex, recently executed for treason, the Turtledove lover of the Phoenix? Questions such as these dominate scholarship of both Shakespeare's poem and the book in which it first appeared: Robert Chester's enigmatic collection of verse, Love's Martyr (1601), where Shakespeare's allegory sits next to erotic love lyrics by Ben Jonson, George Chapman and John Marston, as well as work by the much lesser-known Chester.

Don Rodrigues critiques and revises traditional computational attribution studies by integrating the insights of queer theory to a study of Love's Martyr. A book deeply engaged in current debates in computational literary studies, it is particularly attuned to questions of non-normativity, deviation and departures from style when assessing stylistic patterns. Gathering insights from decades of computational and traditional analyses, it presents, most radically, data that supports the once-outlandish theory that Shakespeare may have had a significant hand in editing works signed by Chester. At the same time, this book insists on the fundamentally collaborative nature of production in Love's Martyr.

Developing a compelling account of how collaborative textual production could work among early modern writers, Shakespeare's Queer Analytics is a much-needed methodological intervention in computational attribution studies. It articulates what Rodrigues describes as 'queer analytics': an approach to literary analysis that joins the non-normative close reading of queer theory to the distant attention of computational literary studies – highlighting patterns that traditional readings often overlook or ignore.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Contents
List of Plates, Figures and Tables
Series Editors’ Preface
Preface
Acknowledgements
Note on Text
Introduction: Love’s Martyr and the case for queer analytics
Part I Queering computation
1 Queerness at scale: The radical singularities of Love’s Martyr
2 Competitive intimacies in the Poetical Essays
Part II Computing Queerness
3 ‘Neither two nor one were called’: Queer Logic and ‘The Phoenix and Turtle’
Afterword
Appendix 1 Technical appendix
Appendix 2 Love’s Martyr’s Poetical Essays
Appendix 3 Love’s Martyr’s Dialogues and Cantos
Notes
Bibliography
Index


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