Thomas Middleton and Early Modern Textual Culture is a comprehensive companion to The Collected Works of Thomas Middleton, providing detailed introductions to and full editorial apparatus for the works themselves as well as a wealth of information about Middleton's historical and literary context.
Gary Taylor is George Matthew Edgar Professor of English at Florida State University. He is general editor of prize-winning, innovative Oxford editions of Shakespeare's Complete Works and Middleton's Collected Works, as well as a prize-winning book on Shakespeare in performance, Moment by Moment by Shakespeare. In addition to his twenty-two scholarly books, he has written for newspapers and magazines on both sides of the Atlantic, been widely interviewed on radio and television, and spoken at major theatres in the UK, USA, and Canada. His reconstruction of The History of Cardenio has been developed through workshops and readings at many theatres, including Shakespeare's Globe (London), the Chicago Shakespeare Theatre, the American Shakespeare Center, and the Shakespeare Theatre in Washington D.C John Lavagnino studied physics at Harvard University and American literature at Brandeis University, where he wrote his dissertation on Vladimir Nabokov. He has worked in atmospheric science at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and in electronic publishing for numerous organizations. He is now Senior Lecturer in Humanities Computing at King's College London, and is working on the digital Catalogue of English Literary Manuscripts 1450-1700.
Part I: The Culture; Gary Taylor: Persons; Mack. P. Jackson: Early Modern Authorship: Canons and Chronologies; Richard Burt: (Un)Censoring in Detail: Middleton, Fetishism, and the Regulation of Dramatic Discourse; Edward Gieskes: 'From Wronger and Wronged Have I Fee': Thomas Middleton and Early Modern Legal Culture; Harold Love: Middleton, Oral Culture, and the Manuscript Economy; John H. Astington: Visual Texts: Middleton and Prints; Adrian Weiss: Manufactured Middleton: Texts in Print; Cyndia Susan Clegg: Taking Liberties, Keeping Privileges: The Retail Book Trade, the State, and the Estate of Middleton, 1597-1627; Maureen Bell: Booksellers without an Author, 1627-1685; John Jowett: Fit for your Companies: Some Seventeenth-Century Readers; Part II: The Texts; Editorial Procedures; Works Cited; Textual Apparatus; THE TEXTS; Part III: Useful Middleton Links; Music from Middleton's Texts edited by Andrew Sabol; Appendix I: Canon and Chronology; Appendix II: Early Allusions to Middleton's Work; Indexes
Show moreThomas Middleton and Early Modern Textual Culture is a comprehensive companion to The Collected Works of Thomas Middleton, providing detailed introductions to and full editorial apparatus for the works themselves as well as a wealth of information about Middleton's historical and literary context.
Gary Taylor is George Matthew Edgar Professor of English at Florida State University. He is general editor of prize-winning, innovative Oxford editions of Shakespeare's Complete Works and Middleton's Collected Works, as well as a prize-winning book on Shakespeare in performance, Moment by Moment by Shakespeare. In addition to his twenty-two scholarly books, he has written for newspapers and magazines on both sides of the Atlantic, been widely interviewed on radio and television, and spoken at major theatres in the UK, USA, and Canada. His reconstruction of The History of Cardenio has been developed through workshops and readings at many theatres, including Shakespeare's Globe (London), the Chicago Shakespeare Theatre, the American Shakespeare Center, and the Shakespeare Theatre in Washington D.C John Lavagnino studied physics at Harvard University and American literature at Brandeis University, where he wrote his dissertation on Vladimir Nabokov. He has worked in atmospheric science at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and in electronic publishing for numerous organizations. He is now Senior Lecturer in Humanities Computing at King's College London, and is working on the digital Catalogue of English Literary Manuscripts 1450-1700.
Part I: The Culture; Gary Taylor: Persons; Mack. P. Jackson: Early Modern Authorship: Canons and Chronologies; Richard Burt: (Un)Censoring in Detail: Middleton, Fetishism, and the Regulation of Dramatic Discourse; Edward Gieskes: 'From Wronger and Wronged Have I Fee': Thomas Middleton and Early Modern Legal Culture; Harold Love: Middleton, Oral Culture, and the Manuscript Economy; John H. Astington: Visual Texts: Middleton and Prints; Adrian Weiss: Manufactured Middleton: Texts in Print; Cyndia Susan Clegg: Taking Liberties, Keeping Privileges: The Retail Book Trade, the State, and the Estate of Middleton, 1597-1627; Maureen Bell: Booksellers without an Author, 1627-1685; John Jowett: Fit for your Companies: Some Seventeenth-Century Readers; Part II: The Texts; Editorial Procedures; Works Cited; Textual Apparatus; THE TEXTS; Part III: Useful Middleton Links; Music from Middleton's Texts edited by Andrew Sabol; Appendix I: Canon and Chronology; Appendix II: Early Allusions to Middleton's Work; Indexes
Show morePart I: The Culture
Gary Taylor: Persons
Mack. P. Jackson: Early Modern Authorship: Canons and
Chronologies
Richard Burt: (Un)Censoring in Detail: Middleton, Fetishism, and
the Regulation of Dramatic Discourse
Edward Gieskes: 'From Wronger and Wronged Have I Fee': Thomas
Middleton and Early Modern Legal Culture
Harold Love: Middleton, Oral Culture, and the Manuscript
Economy
John H. Astington: Visual Texts: Middleton and Prints
Adrian Weiss: Manufactured Middleton: Texts in Print
Cyndia Susan Clegg: Taking Liberties, Keeping Privileges: The
Retail Book Trade, the State, and the Estate of Middleton,
1597-1627
Maureen Bell: Booksellers without an Author, 1627-1685
John Jowett: Fit for your Companies: Some Seventeenth-Century
Readers
Part II: The Texts
Editorial Procedures
Works Cited
Textual Apparatus
THE TEXTS
Part III: Useful Middleton Links
Music from Middleton's Texts edited by Andrew Sabol
Appendix I: Canon and Chronology
Appendix II: Early Allusions to Middleton's Work
Indexes
Gary Taylor is George Matthew Edgar Professor of English at Florida
State University. He is general editor of prize-winning, innovative
Oxford editions of Shakespeare's Complete Works and Middleton's
Collected Works, as well as a prize-winning book on Shakespeare in
performance, Moment by Moment by Shakespeare. In addition to his
twenty-two scholarly books, he has written for newspapers and
magazines on both sides of the Atlantic, been
widely interviewed on radio and television, and spoken at major
theatres in the UK, USA, and Canada. His reconstruction of The
History of Cardenio has been developed through workshops and
readings at many theatres, including
Shakespeare's Globe (London), the Chicago Shakespeare Theatre, the
American Shakespeare Center, and the Shakespeare Theatre in
Washington D.C
John Lavagnino studied physics at Harvard University and American
literature at Brandeis University, where he wrote his dissertation
on Vladimir Nabokov. He has worked in atmospheric science at the
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and in electronic publishing
for numerous organizations. He is now Senior Lecturer in Humanities
Computing at King's College London, and is working on the digital
Catalogue of English Literary Manuscripts 1450-1700.
`elaborately cross-referenced ... a good deal of effort has gone
into making the Companion as user-friendly as possible.'
Michael Neill LRB
`The Oxford Middleton is a monumental achievement. Gary Taylor and
his team of scholars have managed to do for Thomas Middleton what
Heminges and Condell did for Shakespeare in the 1623 First Folio:
they've collected a great playwright's work in a landmark edition,
one that enables us to appreciate afresh an extraordinary literary
career. Taken together, The Collected Works of Thomas Middleton and
its companion volume Thomas Middleton and Early Modern
Textual Culture, provide an essential guide to matters at the heart
of the English literary world in the early seventeenth century,
from authorship and collaboration to censorship, civic pageantry,
and the
London book trade.'
James Shapiro, author of 1599: A Year in the Life of William
Shakespeare and Professor of English, Columbia University
`a monumental work of scholarship'
Jonathan Bate, Times Literary Supplement
`It is not, I think, overstating the case to say that the release
of this edition feels epochal, and the sense of recognition at what
it has added, as well as what it will inspire over the ensuing
decades, is already palpable. The Oxford Middleton is a truly
momentous work, and it is now in the hands of you, the Great
Variety of Readers.'
Will Sharpe, The Shakespeare Bookshop Newsletter
`All of us who care deeply about the history of English drama
welcome with great enthusiasm and excitement the publication of the
Collected Works of Thomas Middleton, a major achievement in textual
scholarship that represents the collective expertise and critical
wisdom of scholars from all over the world. Gary Taylor and his
many collaborators have given us a new and remarkably versatile
Thomas Middleton-a great tragic playwright, a brilliant creator
of
sly and cynical urban comedies, a thoroughly gifted man of the
theater and citizen of London. With this massive collected edition,
the history of English drama is much more complete and we can hope
for many
more professional productions of these neglected plays.'
Gail Paster, Director, Folger Shakespeare Library
`It is hard to exaggerate the scale of the Oxford Middleton
particularly since this is the kind of scholarship which is--in its
diversity and eclecticism--designed to open up debate rather than
close it off. It is a colossal achievement representing a decisive
expansion of Renaissanc studies which will percolate throughout
scholarship and teaching. But what is, perhaps, most exciting, is
that the collection must surely generate a rediscovery of these
eminently stageable plays in the theatre.'
Andrew James Hartley, Editor, Shakespeare Bulletin
`rigorous and informative volume'
SHARP News Bulletin
`The publication of The Complete Works of Middleton will be a major
event for all those who care about the theatre of Shakespeare's
time. The scholarship is meticulous, the commentary is fascinating
and the international team of experts displays the field of
Renaissance Drama studies at its finest. In modern times,
productions of The Changeling and Women Beware Women have shown the
dark side of sex and power that Shakespeare touched on but never
fully
explored. The Complete Works now shows us the full range of
Middleton's talent for comedy and social drama and,
controversially, the full extent of his collaboration with and
development of Shakespeare's
plays.'
Kathleen E. McLuskie, The Shakespeare Institute
`Few editorial projects have been as eagerly anticipated as the
Oxford Middleton, which will utterly transform how we understand
early modern drama, both in the classroom and in our research. As
with Shakespeare, Gary Taylor and his team have set a new gold
standard for textual editing and interpretive criticism, leaping
from the 19th century to the 21st - finally an edition that
captures Middleton's tremendous accomplishments.'
Henry Turner, Rutgers University, New Jersey, author of The English
Renaissance Stage: Geometry, Poetics, and the Practical Spatial
Arts, 1580-1630 (Oxford, 2006)
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