Darren Freebury-Jones
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Robert Greene
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As a result of the infamous attack on Shakespeare in Greene’s Groatsworth of Wit, Robert Greene’s relationship with Shakespeare is often framed in malignant terms. This chapter shows, however, that Greene’s impact on Elizabethan stage conventions has been underappreciated, and that his dramatic output contributed to Shakespeare’s dramaturgy. Having investigated Greene’s traditionally attributed plays, the chapter looks at plays newly assigned to him, the tragedies Locrine and Selimus. The former was included in Shakespeare’s 1664 Third Folio, which tells a fascinating story of how Shakespeare found himself arrayed in Greene’s feathers long after both men had died, while the chapter shows that Shakespeare recalled Selimus in plays such as King John and King Lear.

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Shakespeare’s borrowed feathers

How early modern playwrights shaped the world’s greatest writer

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