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The Quest for Cardenio - Shakespeare, Fletcher, Cervantes, and the Lost Play (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,477
Discovery Miles 24 770
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The Quest for Cardenio - Shakespeare, Fletcher, Cervantes, and the Lost Play (Hardcover)
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This book is about the search for a lost play. Celebrating the
quatercentenary of publication of the first translation of Don
Quixote, it is the first collection of essays entirely devoted to
The History of Cardenio, a play based on Cervantes and probably
written in that same year. It was said to be written by Shakespeare
and the young man who was taking his place, John Fletcher, the most
successful English playwright of the seventeenth century. The book
brings together leading scholars, critics, and theatre
practitioners to discuss the lost (or partially lost) play. It also
re-examines Lewis Theobald's 1727 Double Falsehood, allegedly based
on Cardenio. A range of approaches -new archival evidence,
employment of advanced computer-aided stylometric tests for
authorship attribution, early modern theatre history, literary and
theatrical analysis, musicology, and recent theatrical productions
and adaptations - produces new research findings about the play,
Shakespeare, Fletcher, Cervantes, and the early modern relationship
between Spanish and English culture. The book establishes the
dates, venues, and audience for two performances of Cardenio by the
King's Men in 1613, and identifies glimpses of the play in several
seventeenth-century documents. It also provides much new evidence
and analysis of Double Falsehood, which Theobald claimed was based
on previously unknown manuscripts of a play by Shakespeare. His
enemies, especially Pope, denied the Shakespeare attribution.
Debate has continued ever since. While some contributors advocate
sceptical caution, new research provides stronger evidence than
ever before that a lost Fletcher/Shakespeare Cardenio can be
discerned within Double Falsehood. Uniquely, this collection
combines archival research and literary analysis with accounts of
recent theatrical experiments, which explore the Cardenio problem
by reviving or adapting Double Falsehood, and demonstrate that such
practical theatrical work throws valuable light on some of the
problems that have obstructed traditional scholarly approaches. It
thus offers a new paradigm for the creative interaction of
scholarship and performance.
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