Words that Count: Essays on Early Modern Authorship in Honor of MacDonald P. Jackson

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University of Delaware Press, 2004 - Drama - 291 pages
These essays by leading scholars of early modern attribution, editing, theater, and versification (including Andrew Gurr, Gary Taylor, and Brian Vickers) focus on questions of authorship, authority, and ownership in Marlowe, Peele, Shakespeare, Middleton, Webster and others. Some essays take MacDonald P. Jackson's pioneering work in these fields a stage further, by looking at the critical consequences; others develop new methods, principles, or theoretical positions in determining authorship; still others use new data to extend or challenge Jackson's findings. the University of Auckland.
 

Contents

Tribute to MacDonald P Jackson
11
The Great Divide of 1594
29
Aaron in Titus Andronicus
51
The Troublesome Raigne George Peele and the Date
78
Shakespeare Write A Lovers Complaint? The Jackson
117
Not Shakespeare
141
Othello King Lear and the Sacralization
161
The Pattern of Collaboration in Timon of Athens
181
The Structure of The White Devil
209
Stage Directions
222
Thomas Middleton The Spanish Gypsy and Collaborative
241
A Bibliography
274
Notes on Contributors
281
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