Darren Freebury-Jones
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Thomas Dekker, John Marston, and Ben Jonson
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Having surveyed the plays of dramatists such as Thomas Dekker and John Marston, the chapter elaborates on the fascinating life of their literary rival Ben Jonson. It offers new perspectives on Jonson’s relationship with Shakespeare, explores differences in their approaches towards drama, and points out some interesting verbal links between Jonson plays in which we know Shakespeare acted for the King’s Men, and later Shakespeare plays. These links suggest Shakespeare recalling the structure of his cues and lines, providing fresh evidence on which roles Shakespeare took. The chapter reveals, however, that Shakespeare does not seem to have borrowed heavily from Jacobean contemporary playwrights in terms of dramatic language in the same way as he did Elizabethan predecessors, suggesting that Shakespeare had developed a distinct authorial voice by this point in his career. Moreover, while Shakespeare was evidently conscious of popular genres such as masques and city comedies, he seems to turn away from them in several respects, which provides fascinating insights into Shakespeare’s individuality.

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Shakespeare’s borrowed feathers

How early modern playwrights shaped the world’s greatest writer

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