Darren Freebury-Jones
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Thomas Kyd
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This chapter reveals that Shakespeare owes much greater debts to Marlowe’s room-mate in London, Thomas Kyd, than has been recognised. It explores the influence of Kyd’s dramaturgy, including the blending of darkly comic materials with Senecan tragedy, on Shakespeare, and reveals that Kyd’s style is very similar to early Shakespeare’s in terms of verse habits and language choices. The chapter then explores arguments for a larger canon of plays than has thus far been assigned to Kyd, including King Leir, Arden of Faversham, Fair Em, 1 Henry VI, and Edward III, works that Shakespeare imitated, adapted, revised, and even co-authored. Much has been written on Shakespeare’s borrowings from university-educated playwrights such as Marlowe, but the extent to which Shakespeare was arrayed with his fellow non-university-educated dramatist’s feathers has been overlooked. This chapter provides a significant reappraisal of Kyd’s place in early modern drama and a detailed engagement with arguments that Shakespeare co-authored Arden of Faversham.

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Shakespeare’s borrowed feathers

How early modern playwrights shaped the world’s greatest writer

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