Patrick Cheney
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‘An index and obscure prologue’
Books and theatre in Shakespeare’s literary authorship
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This chapter suggests that Lukas Erne's model of the literary dramatist is not quite accurate, since it remains unconsciously circumscribed by the 'dramatic' terms of the previous phases, and thus neglects to account for the five freestanding poems that this author saw published during his own lifetime. By benefiting from Erne's pioneering work, we may re-classify Shakespeare as an early modern author: he is a literary poet-playwright. From early in his career till late, across the genres of comedy, history, tragedy and romance, he rehearses a discourse of the book and a discourse of the theatre, and lets the terms book and theatre jostle in historically telling way. The chapter recalls Shakespeare's discourse of the theatre briefly to attend more fully to his neglected discourse of the book, including printed books and books of poetry. It focuses on key passages that conjoin the two discourses in a single utterance.

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Shakespeare’s book

Essays in reading, writing and reception

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