Shakespeare, Court Dramatist
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of the theatre during Shakespeare's lifetime and the crucial role of its Masters of the Revels, who supervised all performances there (as well as censoring plays for public performance). Dutton examines the emergence of the Lord Chamberlain's Men and the King's Men, to whom Shakespeare was attached as
their 'ordinary poet', and reviews what is known about the revision of plays in the early modern period. The second half of the study focuses in detail on six of Shakespeare's plays which exist in shorter, less polished texts as well as longer, more familiar ones: Henry VI Part II and III, Romeo and Juliet, Henry V, Hamlet, and The Merry Wives of Windsor. Dutton argues that they are not cut down from those familiar versions, but poorly reported originals which Shakespeare revised for court
performance into what we know best today. More localized revisions in such plays as Titus Andronicus, Richard II, and Henry IV Part II can also best be explained in this context. The court, Richard Dutton argues, is what made Shakespeare Shakespeare.
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Utgitt:
2018
Forlag: Oxford University Press
Innbinding: Paperback
Språk: Engelsk
ISBN: 9780198822257
Format: 23 x 16 cm
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«Shakespeare, Court Dramatist is the work of a master scholar and merits careful attention from anyone interested in the history of English Renaissance drama.»
«Dutton has written a challenging, important book which should make us take the bad quartos more seriously on their own terms, resist uncritical acceptance of conflated texts and re-examine Shakespeares methods of composition.»
«draws together research and ideas from a long and distinguished career ... invite[s] us to think in new ways»
«If the detail is sometimes overwhelming, his chapters are well-organized, and a helpful "conclusions" section summarizes this precise, provocative argument. Following Dutton, it seems that we are actually most likely to bump into a courtier at a Shakespeare play.»
«It is a book that everyone interested in Shakespeares texts will want to read.»
drama, the authors Shakespeare and Ben Jonson, and theatre history.