Francis Bacon’s Contribution to Shakespeare: A New Attribution Method

Author:   Barry R. Clarke ,  Mark Rylance
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367225445


Pages:   310
Publication Date:   06 February 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Francis Bacon’s Contribution to Shakespeare: A New Attribution Method


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Author:   Barry R. Clarke ,  Mark Rylance
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   1.100kg
ISBN:  

9780367225445


ISBN 10:   0367225441
Pages:   310
Publication Date:   06 February 2019
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction 1.1 A new method of attribution 1.2 Overview of the work PART 1: SHAKSPERE AND BACON Chapter 2 A Shakspere biography 2.1 Birthdate 2.2 Education 2.3 Literacy 2.4 Access to source material 2.5 Marriage 2.6 Shakspere the businessman 2.7 The Ben Jonson model 2.8 Shakspere the actor 2.9 Shakspere’s exit Chapter 3 Contemporary opinion 3.1 Shakspere the dramatist 3.2 The ‘War of the Theatres’ 3.3 The Parnassus plays 3.4 Ben Jonson’s view Chapter 4 A fraudulent First Folio 4.1 Misattributions to Shakspere 4.2 William Jaggard’s integrity 4.3 The First Folio 4.4 RCP results Chapter 5 Bacon’s dramatic entrance 5.1 Contemporary opinion of Bacon 5.2 Early years 5.3 Debt, drama, and design 5.4 The fall of Essex 5.5 Bacon’s rise to high office 5.6 Bacon’s fall to low office Chapter 6 A charge of brokerage 6.1 The Groats-worth letter 6.2 The letter’s meaning 6.3 Groats-worth and Vertues Common-wealth 6.4 Chettle, Greene, or Nashe? 6.5 The Malone–Alexander debate 6.6 RCP of the Octavo and Folio 3 Henry VI 6.7 The verdict Chapter 7 Bacon’s Vertues? 7.1 History of Vertues Common-wealth 7.2 Content of Vertues Common-wealth 7.3 Apophthegmes: Crosse–Bacon 7.4 Rare phrases: Crosse–Bacon–Shakespeare 7.5 Further research PART 2: BACON’S INFLUENCE ON SELECTED PLAYS Chapter 8 The Comedy of Errors 8.1 The 1594–5 Gray’s Inn revels 8.2 Gray’s Inn connections 8.3 The identity of the players 8.4 RCP analysis of The Comedy of Errors Chapter 9 Love’s Labour’s Lost 9.1 The Gesta Grayorum 9.2 Love’s Labour’s Lost 9.3 Parallels between GG and LLL 9.4 A play designed around the revels Chapter 10 Twelfth Night 10.1 Dating Twelfth Night’s topical allusions 10.2 Twelfth Night and the Middle Temple 10.3 Middle Temple characters 10.4 Misrule at the Middle Temple 10.5 The acting company 10.6 A Middle Temple play 10.7 An RCP analysis of Twelfth Night Chapter 11 The Tempest 11.1 The Virginia colony 11.2 The ‘True Reportory’ and The Tempest 11.3 Shakspere’s inaccess to the ‘True Reportory’ 11.4 The Tempest and Virginia Company literature 11.5 ‘True Reportory’ and A true declaration 11.6 The Tempest as a political tool 11.7 Francis Bacon’s rare parallels with The Tempest PART 3: ATTRIBUTION METHODS Chapter 12 A history of authorship attribution 12.1 A body of text 12.2 External and internal evidence 12.3 Non-scientific practice 12.4 Biographical delusions 12.5 The introduction of counting methods Chapter 13 Modern attribution methods 13.1 Critique of modern methods 13.2 The Zeta test 13.3 The Delta test 13.4 Phrases and collocations Chapter 14 The new method of Rare Collocation Profiling 14.1 The EEBO search engine 14.2 The RCP method 14.3 Non-equalization of author corpora 14.4 The running track 14.5 A test case: A Funerall Elegye (1612) 14.6 Summary of RCP conclusions Epilogue Appendix A RCP results for 3 Henry VI Appendix B RCP results for The Comedy of Errors Appendix C RCP results for Gesta Grayorum Appendix D RCP results for Love’s Labour’s Lost Appendix E RCP results for Twelfth Night Appendix F RCP results for The Tempest Appendix G Full RCP analysis of Pericles Act 1 BONUS ESSAYS: RESPONSE TO COUNTRY LIFE MAGAZINE 1. Alleged Shakespeare Portrait 2. A Country Controversy

Reviews

Bacon throws a weird shadow over it all, although the detailing is very attractive, and the RCP tests are quite persuasive. [The Tempest chapter is] a perfect account of the story. I'm sure that Bacon was a lot closer to Shakespeare than most current accounts allow him to be. - Professor Andrew Gurr, Editor, New Variorum Tempest I'm sympathetic to rare collocation profiling as a source of evidence for authorship. - Professor Steven Pinker, Harvard University


Bacon throws a weird shadow over it all, although the detailing is very attractive, and the RCP tests are quite persuasive. [The Tempest chapter is] a perfect account of the story. I'm sure that Bacon was a lot closer to Shakespeare than most current accounts allow him to be. Professor Andrew Gurr, editor New Variorum Tempest


Author Information

Barry R. Clarke has a variety of interests. He has a Ph.D. in Shakespeare studies with peer-reviewed publications on The Tempest. His scholarly publications in quantum mechanics have led to an academic treatise The Quantum Puzzle: Critique of Quantum Theory and Electrodynamics (2017) which sets out a new theory of the mass vortex ring. There are also books on recreational mathematics for Cambridge University Press and Dover Publications, while Challenging Logic Puzzles Mensa (2003) is an amazon bestseller. He is presently puzzle compiler for The Daily Telegraph and Prospect magazine (UK). Viewers in the UK might have seen both his puzzle work and his comedy sketches broadcast on both the BBC and ITV.

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