The Tragedy of King LearCambridge University Press, 1992 M10 15 - 313 páginas This is the first fully annotated, critical edition of King Lear to appear for forty years. It includes a comprehensive account of Shakespeare's sources and the literary, political, and folkloric influences at work in the play, a detailed reading of the action, and a substantial stage history of major productions. Jay Halio is concerned to clarify, for those approaching the play for the first time, the vexed question of its textual history. Unlike previous editions, his does not present a conflation of the Quarto and the Folio. Accepting that we have two versions of equal authority, the one derived from Shakespeare's rough drafts, the other from a manuscript used in the playhouses during the seventeenth century, Professor Halio chooses the Folio as the text for this edition. He explains the differences between the two versions and alerts the reader to the rival claims of the Quarto by means of a sampling of parallel passages in the introduction and by an appendix which contains annotated passages unique to the Quarto. |
Contenido
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
THE PLAY | 15 |
KING LEAR ON STAGE AND SCREEN | 34 |
TEXTUAL ANALYSIS PART I | 58 |
SOME PARALLEL PASSAGES | 81 |
NOTE ON THE TEXT | 90 |
LIST OF CHARACTERS | 94 |
THE PLAY | 95 |
TEXTUAL ANALYSIS PART 2 | 265 |
PASSAGES UNIQUE TO THE FIRST QUARTO | 293 |
READING LIST | 311 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Albany Albany's alterations Burgundy Capell cited by Furness collation Compare compositor Cordelia CORNWALL daughters death dost Duke Duthie Edgar edited editors Edmond emendation Enter Exeunt Exit eyes F lineation F omits father fiend Folio Fool Fool's foul papers France GENTLEMAN Gloucester Gloucester's Gonerill Gonerill and Regan Gonerill's Greg Harsnett hath haue heart Hunter Kent Kent's King Lear Kittredge Lear's Leir line Q lines divided lines ending lord madam misreading Muir nature night noble OSWALD Oxford passage play poor pray prompt-book prose Q Q and F Q corr Q reads Q uncorr quarto revision Rosenberg Royal Shakespeare Company says scene sense servant Shaheen Shakespeare sister speak speech stage Stone subst suggests Tate's Taylor Textual Analysis Textual Companion thee Theobald thine thou Tilley Tom o'Bedlam Urkowitz Variants W. W. Greg William Shakespeare words
Referencias a este libro
Euphemism & Dysphemism: Language Used as Shield and Weapon Keith Allan,Kate Burridge Vista de fragmentos - 1991 |
Writing and Reading Differently: Deconstruction and the Teaching of ... George Douglas Atkins,Michael L. Johnson Vista previa limitada - 1985 |