Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Sarah Siddons, theatre voices and recorded memory
- Playing with Shakespeare’s play: Branagh’s Love’s Labour’s Lost
- Bottom and the gramophone: Media, class and comedy in Michael Hoffman’s A Midsummer Night's Dream
- Maurice Evans’s Richard II on Stage, Television and (Almost) Film
- Richard II on the Screen
- ‘Where Lies Your Text?’: Twelfth Night in American Sign Language Translation
- ‘This uncivil and unjust extent against thy peace’: Tim supple’s Twelfth Night, or what violence will
- ‘There’s no such thing’: nothing and nakedness in Polanski’s Macbeth
- Ghosts and mirrors: the gaze in film Hamlets
- ‘Ben, it’s a terrible thing to hate your mother’: mind control in Hamlet and The Manchurian Candidate
- Channelling the ghosts: the Wooster Group’s remediation of the 1964 Electronovision Hamlet
- Listening to Prospero’s Books
- Lend Me Your Ears: Sampling BBC Radio Shakespeare
- An Age of Kings and The ‘Normal American’
- Shakespeare and British Television
- A Local Habitation and a Name: Television and Shakespeare
- Paying attention in Shakespeare parody: from Tom Stoppard to YouTube
- Madagascan will: cinematic Shakespeares / transnational exchanges
- Still life? Anthropocentrism and the fly in Titus Andronicus and Volpone
- Riddling q1: Hamlet’s mill and the trickster
- ‘Speak, that I may see thee’: Shakespeare characters and common words
- Who do the people love?
- A Partial Theory of Original Practice
- Shakespeare Performances in England, 2007
- Professional Shakespeare productions in the British Isles, January–December 2006
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical studies
- 2 Shakespeare in performance
- 3a Editions and textual studies
- 3b Editions and textual studies: The RSC Complete Works
- Index to Volume 61
3a - Editions and textual studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
- Frontmatter
- Sarah Siddons, theatre voices and recorded memory
- Playing with Shakespeare’s play: Branagh’s Love’s Labour’s Lost
- Bottom and the gramophone: Media, class and comedy in Michael Hoffman’s A Midsummer Night's Dream
- Maurice Evans’s Richard II on Stage, Television and (Almost) Film
- Richard II on the Screen
- ‘Where Lies Your Text?’: Twelfth Night in American Sign Language Translation
- ‘This uncivil and unjust extent against thy peace’: Tim supple’s Twelfth Night, or what violence will
- ‘There’s no such thing’: nothing and nakedness in Polanski’s Macbeth
- Ghosts and mirrors: the gaze in film Hamlets
- ‘Ben, it’s a terrible thing to hate your mother’: mind control in Hamlet and The Manchurian Candidate
- Channelling the ghosts: the Wooster Group’s remediation of the 1964 Electronovision Hamlet
- Listening to Prospero’s Books
- Lend Me Your Ears: Sampling BBC Radio Shakespeare
- An Age of Kings and The ‘Normal American’
- Shakespeare and British Television
- A Local Habitation and a Name: Television and Shakespeare
- Paying attention in Shakespeare parody: from Tom Stoppard to YouTube
- Madagascan will: cinematic Shakespeares / transnational exchanges
- Still life? Anthropocentrism and the fly in Titus Andronicus and Volpone
- Riddling q1: Hamlet’s mill and the trickster
- ‘Speak, that I may see thee’: Shakespeare characters and common words
- Who do the people love?
- A Partial Theory of Original Practice
- Shakespeare Performances in England, 2007
- Professional Shakespeare productions in the British Isles, January–December 2006
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical studies
- 2 Shakespeare in performance
- 3a Editions and textual studies
- 3b Editions and textual studies: The RSC Complete Works
- Index to Volume 61
Summary
Few new editions of Shakespeare can deservedly be called 'magisterial', but The Winter's Tale in the New Variorum Shakespeare is one of those happy few. Robert Kean Turner and Virginia Westling Haas have produced a great and glorious piece of scholarship, representing a lifetime or two of detailed research and careful synthesis. After going through its 974 pages with fairly fine combs, a graduate assistant and I found only a paltry number of trivial errors. Although variorums are generally used as research tools rather than reading texts – and the searchable PDF file that comes on a disk bundled with this book will certainly make the vast amounts of data therein more readily accessible – the subtle brilliance of Turner's work also rewards sustained reading.
A New Variorum commentary note standardly provides the most salient remarks of previous critics, interspersed with sometimes lengthy responses by the editor. (In Marvin Spevack’s variorum edition of Antony and Cleopatra, for instance, the fairly typical note on tln 3305 includes forty lines of quotation from critics and an additional twenty-five lines of commentary from Spevack.)
Turner’s approach, on the other hand, is a model of elegant concision. He tends to preface each critical quotation with a single adverb or, at most, an adverbial phrase. Turner’s adverbs are comparative, evaluative, perspicacious and playful. Moreover, the use of adverbs rather than adjectives signals that the focus is (unapologetically) on the act of criticism, as the voices of commentators through the centuries are introduced with such modifiers as ‘more gently’, ‘less exactly’, ‘oddly’, ‘questionably’, ‘wrongly’, ‘more accurately’, ‘fruitlessly’ and ‘too delicately’. In the rare instances in which he ventures more than a single-word critique, Turner is nonetheless incisive, and often withering: ‘Parry alleges that few people worry about such things, though it is evident that Sh. did.’
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Shakespeare Survey , pp. 388 - 394Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008