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carnegie david; taylor gary - the quest for  cardenio

The Quest for Cardenio Shakespeare, Fletcher, Cervantes, and the Lost Play

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Dettagli

Genere:Libro
Lingua: Inglese
Pubblicazione: 09/2012





Note Editore

This book is about the search for a lost play. Celebrating the quatercentenary of publication of the first translation of Don Quixote, it is the first collection of essays entirely devoted to The History of Cardenio, a play based on Cervantes and probably written in that same year. It was said to be written by Shakespeare and the young man who was taking his place, John Fletcher, the most successful English playwright of the seventeenth century. The book brings together leading scholars, critics, and theatre practitioners to discuss the lost (or partially lost) play. It also re-examines Lewis Theobald's 1727 Double Falsehood, allegedly based on Cardenio. A range of approaches -new archival evidence, employment of advanced computer-aided stylometric tests for authorship attribution, early modern theatre history, literary and theatrical analysis, musicology, and recent theatrical productions and adaptations - produces new research findings about the play, Shakespeare, Fletcher, Cervantes, and the early modern relationship between Spanish and English culture. The book establishes the dates, venues, and audience for two performances of Cardenio by the King's Men in 1613, and identifies glimpses of the play in several seventeenth-century documents. It also provides much new evidence and analysis of Double Falsehood, which Theobald claimed was based on previously unknown manuscripts of a play by Shakespeare. His enemies, especially Pope, denied the Shakespeare attribution. Debate has continued ever since. While some contributors advocate sceptical caution, new research provides stronger evidence than ever before that a lost Fletcher/Shakespeare Cardenio can be discerned within Double Falsehood. Uniquely, this collection combines archival research and literary analysis with accounts of recent theatrical experiments, which explore the Cardenio problem by reviving or adapting Double Falsehood, and demonstrate that such practical theatrical work throws valuable light on some of the problems that have obstructed traditional scholarly approaches. It thus offers a new paradigm for the creative interaction of scholarship and performance.




Sommario

1 - Introduction
2 - A History of The History of Cardenio
3 - After Arden
4 - Cardenio and the Eighteenth-century Shakespeare Canon
5 - Malone's Double Falsehood
6 - 'Whether one did Contrive, the other Write, / Or one Fram'd the Plot, the Other did Indite': Fletcher and Theobald as Collaborative Writers
7 - Looking for Shakespeare in Double Falsehood: Stylistic Evidence
8 - Can Double Falsehood Be Merely a Forgery by Lewis Theobald?
9 - Theobald's Pattern of Adaptation: The Duchess of Malfi and Richard II
10 - Four Characters in Search of a Subplot: Quixote, Sancho, and Cardenio
11 - Don Quixote and Shakespeare's Collaborative Turn to Romance
12 - The Friend in Cardenio, Double Falsehood, and Don Quixote
13 - Transvestism, Transformation, and Text: Cross-dressing and Gender Roles in Double Falsehood/The History of Cardenio
14 - In This Good Time: Cardenio and the Temporal Character of Shakespearean Drama
15 - A Select Chronology of Cardenio
16 - The Embassy, The City, The Court, The Text: Cardenio Performed in 1613
17 - Cardenio without Shakespeare
18 - Nostalgia for the Cervantes-Shakespeare link: Charles David Ley's Historia de Cardenio
19 - Cultural Mobility and Transitioning Authority: Greenblatt's Cardenio Project
20 - Re-imagining Cardenio
21 - Will the Real Cardenio Please Stand Up: Review of Richards' Cardenio in Cambridge
22 - Theobald Restor'd: Double Falsehood at the Union Theatre, Southwark
23 - Restoring Double Falsehood to the Perpendicular for the RSC
24 - Exploring The History of Cardenio in Performance
25 - Taylor's The History of Cardenio in Wellington
26 - 'May I be metamorphosed': Cardenio by Stages




Autore

David Carnegie is Research Professor of Theatre at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. He is co-editor of the Cambridge edition of The Works of John Webster, and has published widely on Elizabethan drama and stagecraft. He has also worked professionally as a director, dramaturg, and critic, and directed the first full production of Gary Taylor's 'creative reconstruction' of Double Falsehood entitled The History of Cardenio. 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.










Altre Informazioni

ISBN:

9780199641819

Condizione: Nuovo
Dimensioni: 241 x 29.8 x 169 mm Ø 826 gr
Formato: Copertina rigida
Illustration Notes:9 black-and-white halftones
Pagine Arabe: 436


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