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21 - Shakespeare: reading on

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 January 2011

Margreta De Grazia
Affiliation:
University of Pennsylvania
Stanley Wells
Affiliation:
The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
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Summary

Complete works

It sounds obvious, but the best first step - indeed, the best single Shakespearian investment it's possible to make - is to get hold of a reliable version of the words Shakespeare wrote. A collected edition of the plays and poems should not merely provide a reliable, helpfully annotated set of texts, it should also be honest about the decisions that went into editing. It should contain essential supplementary information as well: an account of Shakespeare's life, background on his linguistic and political contexts, stage history, suggestions about how to approach and interpret the works and tips on what to read next (this chapter has its own thoughts on each of those topics too).

That said, no complete works is perfect; editors argue too much for that. The safest choice remains The Riverside Shakespeare, edited most recently by G. Blakemore Evans (1997), which contains solid historical background, detail on documentary sources and criticism, light glossing on the page and some of the best short essays on the plays still in print. Yet Riverside's presentation of the texts is somewhat old-fashioned, and many prefer to use the more experimental William Shakespeare: The Complete Works, known as the 'Oxford Shakespeare', edited by Stanley Wells and Gary Taylor, which was originally published in 1986, then revised in 2005.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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