Available Formats
Shakespeare / Text: Contemporary Readings in Textual Studies, Editing and Performance
By (Author) Dr Claire M. L. Bourne
Series edited by Dr. Farah Karim Cooper
Series edited by Professor Gordon McMullan
Series edited by Lucy Munro
Series edited by Professor Sonia Massai
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
The Arden Shakespeare
21st October 2021
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1600 to c 1800
Literary reference works
822.33
Hardback
464
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
826g
Shakespeare / Text sets new agendas for the study and use of the Shakespearean text. Written by 20 leading experts on textual matters, each chapter challenges a single entrenched binary such as book/theatre, source/adaptation, text/paratext, canon/apocrypha, sense/nonsense, extant/ephemeral, material/digital and original/copy that has come to both define and limit the way we read, analyze, teach, perform and edit Shakespeare today. Drawing on methods from book history, bibliography, editorial theory, library science, the digital humanities, theatre studies and literary criticism, the collection as a whole proposes that our understanding of Shakespeare and early modern drama more broadly changes radically when 'either/or' approaches to the Shakespearean text are reconfigured. The chapters in Shakespeare / Text make strong cases for challenging received wisdom and offer new, portable methods of treating 'the text', in its myriad instantiations, that will be useful to scholars, editors, theatre practitioners, teachers and librarians.
Claire M. L. Bourne is Assistant Professor of English at the Pennsylvania State University, USA. Her teaching and research focus on early modern drama, book history, textual editing, and theatre studies. She is the author of Typographies of Performance in Early Modern England (OUP, 2020) and has published extensively on book design and the history of reading. She is editing Henry the Sixth, Part 1, for the Arden Shakespeare Fourth Series, and is collaborating with Jason Scott- Warren (University of Cambridge) on a series of projects related to the Free Library of Philadelphias copy of the Shakespeare First Folio annotated by John Milton.