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This second edition of Othello has a new, illustrated introduction
by leading American scholar Ayanna Thompson, which addresses such
key issues as race, religion and gender, as well as looking at ways
in which the play has been adapted in more recent times. Othello is
one of Shakespeare's great tragedies-written in the same five-year
period as Hamlet, King Lear, and Macbeth. The new introduction
attends to the play's different meanings throughout history, while
articulating the historical context in which Othello was created,
paying particular attention to Shakespeare's source materials and
the evidence about early modern constructions of racial and
religious difference. It also explores the life of the play in
different historical moments, demonstrating how meanings and
performances develop, accrue, and metamorphose over time. The
volume provides a rich and current resource, making this
best-selling play edition ideal for today's students at advanced
school and undergraduate level.
In a groundbreaking piece of scholarly detective work, Professor
Honigmann - editor of the forthcoming Arden 3 edition of Othello -
uncovers in more detail than any previous study the hidden history
of the two early texts of Othello, the Quarto and the Folio. He
traces the crucial role played by two men in transforming
Shakespeare's almost illegible manuscript to print: Thomas Walkley,
the publisher of the Quarto, and Ralph Crane, the scribe who
prepared the printer's copy for the Folio. Through careful analysis
of particular passages Honigmann exposes the extent to which
versions of Othello adopted by editors and widely regarded as
fundamentally 'Shakespearean' were profoundly influenced by others
than Shakespeare himself. Questioning time-honoured editorial
procedures the findings of Texts of Othello have implications for
many other of the plays of the Shakespeare canon, and more widely
for questions of authorship and the doctrine of the 'better text'.
This piece of literary detective work uncovers the hidden history
of the two early texts of "Othello", the Quarto and the Folio. It
traces the crucial roles played by two people who were closely
involved in transforming Shakespeare's almost illegible manuscripts
into print: Thomas Walkley, the publisher of Q, whose questionable
editoral procedures and shaky finances were involving him in
litigation with a printer and another of his authors during the
period when Q "Othello" was passing through his hands; and Ralph
Crane, the scribe who was responsible for preparing printer's copy
for F. New evidence enables the author both to identify the scribe
and to look in detail at his working practices. The author argues
that many readings in the F text, adopted by almost all editors and
long since regarded as fundamentally "Shakespearean", are
substitutions highly characteristic of Crane, and not the words
written by Shakespeare. Building on this information, and analyzing
many passages in detail, the author questions time-honoured
editorial procedures - among them the treatment of Shakespeare's
verse.
This memorial edition honours the late Harold Jenkins, General
Editor of the Arden 2nd Series and editor of the Arden 2 Hamlet,
collecting his most valued classic lectures and essays for the
first time in one volume. Many of these are now out of print, or
have never been formally published, making this a unique tribute
edition. Jenkins was a globally respected academic, and his works
are still critically current. His most memorable essays have been
chosen and edited by Ernst Honigmann to give the reader unique
access to the very best of Harold Jenkins' critical work. Featuring
in particular his famous essays on Hamlet, this book makes an
invaluable companion piece to Jenkins' Arden edition of the play.
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