Description
This study establishes the remarkable presence of Shakespeare's plays and poems in the early modern English book trade.
About the Author
Lukas Erne is Professor of English at the University of Geneva. He holds degrees from the Universities of Lausanne, Oxford and Geneva. He has taught at the University of Neuchatel and, as Visiting Professor, at Yale University, Connecticut. He has been the Fowler Hamilton Research Fellow at Christ Church, Oxford, and the recipient of research fellowships at the Folger Shakespeare Library and the Huntington Library. He is the author of Shakespeare's Modern Collaborators (2008), Beyond 'The Spanish Tragedy': A Study of the Works of Thomas Kyd (2001) and Shakespeare as Literary Dramatist (2003), which was named 'Book of the Year' in The Times Literary Supplement. He is the editor, with Guillemette Bolens, of Medieval and Early Modern Authorship (2011), of The First Quarto of Romeo and Juliet (2007) and, with M. J. Kidnie, of Textual Performance: The Modern Reproduction of Shakespeare's Drama (2004). He gave the Lyell Lectures, on 'Shakespeare and the Book Trade', at the University of Oxford in spring 2012.
Reviews
'An admirable amount of original research has gone into [this] study, making it of use to a wide array of readers. With Shakespeare and the Book Trade, Lukas Erne manages to do that most coveted of things: he has written another book that everyone must read.' Patrick Cheney, Pennsylvania State University
'Lukas Erne's follow-up volume to Shakespeare as Literary Dramatist always promised to be an exciting and challenging piece of scholarship. That promise is fully realised here. Shakespeare and the Book Trade is an engaging, intelligent, detailed and masterful study, which will serve as a standard reference work for years to come.' Andrew Murphy, University of St Andrews
'Erne marshals a mass of evidence which shows that Shakespeare's plays were widely read before 1600 ... his writing is clear, calm, well-mannered [and] procedurally thorough.' The Tablet
'Clearly argued, with plenty of supporting evidence and written in an elegant and eminently reasonable style.' The Times Literary Supplement
'In a book that is a companion to his highly influential study Shakespeare as Literary Dramatist, Erne presents a Shakespeare entirely preeminent among his contemporaries ... Shakespeare and the Book Trade powerfully asserts that Shakespeare was as successful in the printing house as in the playhouse.' Quarto
'... [an] impressive collocation of facts about Shakespeare's presence in print during and shortly after his lifetime ... So thorough is Erne's research here that this study has claims on being, like the work of Chambers and Schoenbaum, central to research in the field.' Comparative Drama
'... the first work to make a broad study of Shakespeare's presence in the book trade during his life and his own utilization of the trade ... a must-read for anyone interested in Shakespeare.' CILIP Rare Books Newsletter
'Shakespeare and the Book Trade advances our understanding of its subject at every turn.' Paul Dean, English Studies
'A valuable reference work for scholars and students of Shakespeare, early modern drama, and book history.' Claire M. L. Bourne, SHARP News
'Shakespeare and the Book Trade provides a comprehensive picture of Shakespeare's enduring popularity. This highly influential analysis will be of particular interest to scholars of the early modern book trade, early modern printed drama and, of course, scholars seeking to study Shakespeare within the material, cultural, and monetary contexts of his own time.' Andie Silva, The Sixteenth Century Journal
Book Information
ISBN 9780521765664
Author Lukas Erne
Format Hardback
Page Count 320
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 600g
Dimensions(mm) 231mm * 155mm * 25mm