Textual Shakespeare: Writing and the Word

Author:   Graham Holderness
Publisher:   University of Hertfordshire Press
ISBN:  

9781902806211


Pages:   304
Publication Date:   26 September 2003
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained


Our Price $79.07 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Textual Shakespeare: Writing and the Word


Add your own review!

Overview

""Textual Shakespeare"" reassesses the Bard as a writer in the light of the late-20th century ""revolution"" in bibliography and textual studies. Reviewing debates in textual theory and practice, Holderness concludes that ""Shakespeare"" is not a writer but a collection of documents, none of which can with any certainty be linked to whatever it was the author wanted to say. According to modern literary studies all texts are copies, always already changed, and there are no ""originals"". Editors are translators; and scholars and critics rewrite the writing they study. Holderness goes beyond both traditional and ""materialist"" bibliography to show that texts are both physical media, made and remade by a series of craftspeople; and rich repositories of changeable meaning. The book advocates a recovery of ancient concepts such as creativity and imagination, together with a recognition of the technical and essentially collaborative nature of all writing. Shakespeare is then situated within this theoretical context, via a brief history of the plays' textual reproduction. Here Holderness shows that modern Shakespeare editions are radical rewritings, and that contemporary textual theory opens the way to much more inventive textual activities of reconstruction and translation. A series of chapters on individual plays provides illustrative examples of such textual activities in practice. The two texts of ""King Lear"" are studied as discrepant reworking of a traditional narrative. The single text of Macbeth is compared to a text-that-never-was - the version seen by an eyewitness in 1611 - and the lost text reconstructed from that evidence. A chapter of Hamlet concentrates on 20th century rewritings of the plays, including Holderness' own novel ""The Prince of Denmark"" (2001). The two texts of ""Henry V"" are examined as evidence of a substantial gap between theatrical writing and theatrical practice in the theatre of Shakespeare's day. The book concludes that all Shakespeare scholarship, editing and criticism are devoted to a quest for something missing: not the lost manuscript (which even if recovered would not in any case answer all our questions), but rather the absence that writing always invokes. Where this insight takes us is the subject of a tantalising and suggestive conclusion. Holderness stresses throughout the creativity involved not only in the act of writing but in the many processes of rewriting that make up any historical culture. By way of illustration ""Textual Shakespeare"" includes a number of short ""creative"" works, mostly verse translations of Latin and Old English poems. The book thus attempts to build bridges between writing and criticism, creation and reproduction, ""text"" and ""technology"". Drawing on an wide range of sources, from classical poetry to deconstructionist theory, from Anglo-Saxon verse to modern bibliographical scholarship, this is a critical-creative book for the 21st century.

Full Product Details

Author:   Graham Holderness
Publisher:   University of Hertfordshire Press
Imprint:   University of Hertfordshire Press
Dimensions:   Width: 13.80cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.458kg
ISBN:  

9781902806211


ISBN 10:   1902806212
Pages:   304
Publication Date:   26 September 2003
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained

Table of Contents

Reviews

""Graham Holderness's book forms a bold, imaginative, and remarkably wide-ranging contribution to thought about the origins and presentation of Shakespeare's text."" Professor Stanley Wells, Associate Editor, Penguin Shakespare and General Editor, Oxford Shakespeare. ""Graham Holderness brilliantly explores the inevitable desire for, and the necessary frustration in finding, the Shakespearean original that lies behind the printed texts of his plays. In this unusually alert, sophisticated and lively book, Holderness shows us how the printed plays reflect the complexity of their production, and in the process, he reminds us that writing itself is a central way in which we try to make sense of our world."" Professor David Scott Kastan, Columbia University, Joint General Editor, Arden Shakespeare.


Graham Holderness's book forms a bold, imaginative, and remarkably wide-ranging contribution to thought about the origins and presentation of Shakespeare's text. Professor Stanley Wells, Associate Editor, Penguin Shakespare and General Editor, Oxford Shakespeare. Graham Holderness brilliantly explores the inevitable desire for, and the necessary frustration in finding, the Shakespearean original that lies behind the printed texts of his plays. In this unusually alert, sophisticated and lively book, Holderness shows us how the printed plays reflect the complexity of their production, and in the process, he reminds us that writing itself is a central way in which we try to make sense of our world. Professor David Scott Kastan, Columbia University, Joint General Editor, Arden Shakespeare.


Author Information

Holderness is well-known in Shakespeare scholarship as one of the pioneers of cultural materialist criticism, as well as a significant contributor to historical, performance and textual studies. Now as Shakespeare criticism and scholarship are registering the impact of such theoretically-inspired work he characteristically goes further than other writers in pushing forward a new approach and a new agenda. He is author, co-author or editor of 31 books, 22 of which are on Shakespeare, and include Shakespeare's History (1985), The Shakespeare Myth (1988), Shakespeare: the Histories (2000) and the two volumes which this volume concludes, Cultural Shakespeare: essays in the Shakespeare myth (2001) and Visual Shakespeare: essays on film and television (2002). Holderness has also published original verse translations and a critical survey of Anglo-Saxon poetry, Anglo-Saxon Verse (Northcote House, 2000). His first novel, The Prince of Denmark, was published by the University of Hertfordshire Press last year. Graham Holderness is Professor of English, Dean of Humanities, Languages and Education, and Director of Research Policy at the University of Hertfordshire. He lives in London, England.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

RGJUNE2025

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List