Arcadia restored : a modern-spelling edition of MS. Egerton 1994, folios 212-23 in the British Library : an anonymous untitled work sometimes referred to as Time's triumph
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Bibliographic Information
Arcadia restored : a modern-spelling edition of MS. Egerton 1994, folios 212-23 in the British Library : an anonymous untitled work sometimes referred to as Time's triumph
(AMS studies in the Renaissance, no. 47)
AMS Press, c2010
- Uniform Title
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Note
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The masque-like drama ""Arcadia Restored"" was composed anonymously at the time of the English Civil War, when public performances of plays were banned but when the theatrical culture that had surrounded Shakespeare was still alive - and the glories of Restoration drama were soon to bloom. Published in a stand-alone edition only once before, and now newly edited by textual critic Akihiro Yamada, ""Arcadia Restored"" sheds fascinating light on illegal dramatic activities in the years before the Restoration. The heart of this edition is of course the play itself, 'an allegorical entertainment', as Yamada describes it, populated by satyrs and nymphs, Juno and Cupid, and Fortune and Virtue, among many others. But this edition also features a rich editorial apparatus that offers a discussion of the provenance of the untitled manuscript and its physical aspects and other features, as well as detailing critics' varied ideas about the work's possible author (George Chapman among them), the play's date and sources, the number of players required to stage it, even its possible performance history. Yamada's notes to individual lines will help both general readers and specialists better understand the allusions sprinkled throughout the text. A glossary and a set of appendices that reproduce extracts from two possible sources for the play are also included. This edition is published as a complement to the original-spelling version of ""Arcadia Restored"" available for the first time in Yamada's collection ""Secrets of the Printed Page in the Age of Shakespeare"" (""AMS Studies in the Renaissance"", number 46).
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations and Bibliography
- Introduction
- 1. The Manuscript
- 1. Provenance
- 2. Description
- 3. Hand
- 4. The hand's characteristic features
- 2. Modern Texts
- 3. This Edition
- 1. Title of the Egerton manuscript
- 2. Nature of this edition
- 3. Procedures for modernization
- 4. Prose - verse lineation
- 4. The Work
- 1. Author
- 2. Date
- 3. Sources
- 4. Title and genre
- 5. Outline of the story
- 6. Episodes
- 7. Structure
- 8. A vantage-point or viewpoints
- 9. Audio-visual attractions
- 10. Doubling of parts
- 11. Number of players required
- 12. Stage history
- Arcadia Restored (Modern-spelling text)
- Lineation
- Notes
- Notes A: Textual
- Notes B: Non-textual
- Appendices
- Glossary.
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