'Counterfeiting' Shakespeare: Evidence, Authorship and John Ford's Funerall Elegye'Counterfeiting' Shakespeare addresses the fundamental issue of what Shakespeare actually wrote, and how this is determined. In recent years his authorship has been claimed for two poems, the lyric 'Shall I die?' and A Funerall Elegye. These attributions have been accepted into certain major editions of Shakespeare's works but Brian Vickers argues that both attributions rest on superficial verbal parallels; both use too small a sample, ignore negative evidence, and violate basic principles in authorship studies. Through a fresh examination of the evidence, Professor Vickers shows that neither poem has the stylistic and imaginative qualities we associate with Shakespeare. In other words, they are 'counterfeits', in the sense of anonymously authored works wrongly presented as Shakespeare's. He argues that the poet and dramatist John Ford wrote the Elegye: its poetical language (vocabulary, syntax, prosody) is indistinguishable from Ford's, and it contains several hundred close parallels with his work. By combining linguistic and statistical analysis this book makes an important contribution to authorship studies. |
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Page vi
... written permission of Cambridge University Press . First published in print format 2002 ISBN - 13 978-0-511-06040-3 eBook ( Adobe Reader ) ISBN - 10 0-511-06040-8 eBook ( Adobe Reader ) ISBN - 13 978-0-521-77243-3 hardback ISBN - IO 0 ...
... written permission of Cambridge University Press . First published in print format 2002 ISBN - 13 978-0-511-06040-3 eBook ( Adobe Reader ) ISBN - 10 0-511-06040-8 eBook ( Adobe Reader ) ISBN - 13 978-0-521-77243-3 hardback ISBN - IO 0 ...
Page xii
... written it . Taylor scaled down some of his claims , but clung to the attribution , and – with the support of his senior editor , Stanley Wells - printed ' Shall I die ? ' in the Oxford Complete Works under the heading ' Various Poems ...
... written it . Taylor scaled down some of his claims , but clung to the attribution , and – with the support of his senior editor , Stanley Wells - printed ' Shall I die ? ' in the Oxford Complete Works under the heading ' Various Poems ...
Page xiv
... written another elegy between 1600 and 1609 , or might have produced other forms of verse . Foster's sample was far too small to justify the absolute claims he made , having identified linguistic habits shared by ' W. S. ' and ...
... written another elegy between 1600 and 1609 , or might have produced other forms of verse . Foster's sample was far too small to justify the absolute claims he made , having identified linguistic habits shared by ' W. S. ' and ...
Page xviii
... written these two poems. The case for Ford's authorship of the Elegyeseems to me so strong that I cannot think of any other explana- tion for the multitude of verbal details linking his writing to that poem. I hope that the editors of ...
... written these two poems. The case for Ford's authorship of the Elegyeseems to me so strong that I cannot think of any other explana- tion for the multitude of verbal details linking his writing to that poem. I hope that the editors of ...
Page 4
... written by any other known poet ' ( Taylor 1985a , p . 12 ) . Well , you may call these categories ' scholarly jargon ' if you are writing in a non - scholarly journal , such as the New York Times Book Review , but you had better be ...
... written by any other known poet ' ( Taylor 1985a , p . 12 ) . Well , you may call these categories ' scholarly jargon ' if you are writing in a non - scholarly journal , such as the New York Times Book Review , but you had better be ...
Contents
1 | |
PART I Donald Fosters Shakespearean construct | 55 |
PART II John Fords Funerall Elegye | 261 |
Appendices | 467 |
Notes | 509 |
Bibliography | 554 |
Index | 563 |
Other editions - View all
'Counterfeiting' Shakespeare: Evidence, Authorship and John Ford's Funerall ... Brian Vickers No preview available - 2009 |
'Counterfeiting' Shakespeare: Evidence, Authorship and John Ford's Funerall ... Brian Vickers No preview available - 2002 |
Common terms and phrases
Abrams abstract ascription attribution authorship studies Brian Vickers canon Christes Bloodie Sweat cited critics Cyrus Hoy death Dekker described diction discussion Donald Foster doth dramatist edition editors Elegy Elegye's Elizabethan Elliott and Valenza English essay evidence fair Fames Memoriall figure Ford's plays Ford's poems Foster claimed frequently Funeral Elegy Funerall Elegye Golden Meane hendiadys Henry instances John Ford Laws of Candy linguistic literary Love's Sacrifice Lover's Melancholy mind modern Monsarrat Mountjoy never Noble noun occurs opinion Oxford passage percent Perkin Warbeck phrase poem's poet poet's poetry praise prose published punctuation readers recurs refer Renaissance rhetoric rhyme Richard sample scenes scholars sequence Shakespeare's authorship Sonnets stanza statistics style stylistic Sun's Darling syntactical syntax Taylor tests thee Thomas thou tion usage verb verse line Vickers virtue vocabulary William Peter William Shakespeare Witch of Edmonton words writing wrote youth