Shakespeare and the Rise of the Editor Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Shakespeare and the Rise of the Editor Book

Massai challenges the common assumption that the first editor of Shakespeare was Nicholas Rowe, who published his edition of Shakespeare's Works in 1709. Including six case studies of a selection of early printed playbooks, this 2007 book represents a sustained attempt to provide a prehistory of the official editorial tradition.Read More

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  • Product Description

    Sonia Massai's central claim in this 2007 book is that the texts of early printed editions of Renaissance drama, including Shakespeare's, did not simply 'degenerate' or 'corrupt' over time, as subsequent editions were printed using the immediate predecessor as their basis. By focusing on early correctors of dramatic texts for the press, this book identifies a previously overlooked category of textual agents involved in the process of their transmission into print. Massai also challenges the common assumption that the first editor of Shakespeare was Nicholas Rowe, who published his edition of Shakespeare's Works in 1709. The study offers a 'prehistory' of editing from the rise of English drama in print at the beginning of the sixteenth century to the official rise of the editorial tradition of Shakespeare at the beginning of the eighteenth century.

  • 0521878055
  • 9780521878050
  • Sonia Massai
  • 9 August 2007
  • Cambridge University Press
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 266
  • 1
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