For more than four centuries, cultural preferences, literary values, critical contexts, and personal tastes have governed readers' responses to Shakespeare's sonnets. Early private readers often considered these poems in light of the religious, political, and humanist values by which they lived. Other seventeenth- and eighteenth- century readers, such as stationers and editors, balanced their personal literary preferences against the imagined or actual interests of the literate public to whom they marketed carefully curated editions of the sonnets, often successfully. Whether public or…mehr
For more than four centuries, cultural preferences, literary values, critical contexts, and personal tastes have governed readers' responses to Shakespeare's sonnets. Early private readers often considered these poems in light of the religious, political, and humanist values by which they lived. Other seventeenth- and eighteenth- century readers, such as stationers and editors, balanced their personal literary preferences against the imagined or actual interests of the literate public to whom they marketed carefully curated editions of the sonnets, often successfully. Whether public or private, however, many disparate sonnet interpretations from the sonnets' first two centuries in print have been overlooked by modern sonnet scholarship, with its emphasis on narrative and amorous readings of the 1609 sequence. First Readers of Shakespeare's Sonnets reintroduces many early readings of Shakespeare's sonnets, arguing that studying the priorities and interpretations of these previous readers expands the modern critical applications of these poems, thereby affording them numerous future applications. This volume draws upon book history, manuscript studies, and editorial theory to recover four lost critical approaches to the sonnets, highlighting early readers' interests in Shakespeare's classical adaptations, political applicability, religious themes, and rhetorical skill during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Faith D. Acker received her doctorate in Renaissance Literature from the University of St Andrews. Subsequently, and while writing this book, she has taught at The University of Sheffield, Cornerstone Academy, Pellissippi State Community College, Northern Virginia Community College, Montgomery College, and Signum University. Her additional work on the sonnets' early readers appears in Canonising Shakespeare: Stationers and the Book Trade, 1640-1740 (eds. Depledge and Kirwan, 2017) and is forthcoming in Shakespeare Quarterly.
Inhaltsangabe
The Author to the Reader
Introduction: 'The Meaning' of the Sonnets
The Sonnets, their texts, and their readers
The Passionate Pilgrim and Shakespeare's 'sugred' reputation
Texts and editions
Pilgrim as a sonnet sequence
Shakespeare's vendible name and relevant prints
Supplementing Shakespeare with the classics
Reading and revising the sonnets
Reading and Revising Shake-Speare's Sonnets (1609)
Structure, contexts, and paratexts of the 1609 quarto
Thorpe and the critics
Sonnets and sequences: Revisionist love stories
Reading Thorpe's Sonnet 2
Annotating the sonnets
The manuscripts of Sonnet 2: Sex, sonnets, and spirituality
Extant manuscript copies of Sonnet 2
Sexual contexts for Sonnet 2
Sonnet 2 in politics and religion
Friends and elegies: Reading Sonnet 2 among epitaphs
John Benson's sonnet sequences (Poems: Written by Wil. Shake-speare. Gent.)
Benson and Shakespeare
Part I: Eternity of beauty
Part II: Miscellaneity and duality
Part III: A Marriage of perjured minds
Part IV: Classics and imputed works
Celebrations of Church and King: An early Cambridge reader
Reading habits and approaches
Cambridge origins
Poems in praise of God
Poems to honour the King
Contextualizing women
For the love of God, not woman
Restoration revisions: Musical, dramatic, and miscellany readings
Mountebanks and martyrs: Lawes' musical setting
Gender, duplicity, and eternal passion: Suckling's Brennoralt
Manuscript variants and textual fluidity: Reading and sharing
Extracts, miscellanies, and new contexts: Adapting the sonnets in the late seventeenth century
Supplementing Shakespeare and creating the canon
Critical predilections: The autobiographical Shakespeare
Life after Benson: Supplements and supplementarity
Notes and Various Readings: The ultimate supplement
Capell's cento and Shakespeare's language
Collecting Shakespeare: Complete and incomplete canons
Edmond Malone: Plotting the Sonnets
The Search for authorial authenticity
Poems and plays
The Editor and his characters
Reading the Sonnets after Malone: Independent responses
Debating the poems: Critical annotations
Sonnet sententiae
Reading and editing the eighteenth century
Beyond Malone: The New debate
Sonnet Futures
The Author to the Reader Introduction: 'The Meaning' of the Sonnets The Sonnets, their texts, and their readers 1. The Passionate Pilgrim and Shakespeare's 'sugred' reputation Texts and editions Pilgrim as a sonnet sequence Shakespeare's vendible name and relevant prints Supplementing Shakespeare with the classics Reading and revising the sonnets 2. Reading and Revising Shake-Speare's Sonnets (1609) Structure, contexts, and paratexts of the 1609 quarto Thorpe and the critics Sonnets and sequences: Revisionist love stories Reading Thorpe's Sonnet 2 Annotating the sonnets 3. The manuscripts of Sonnet 2: Sex, sonnets, and spirituality Extant manuscript copies of Sonnet 2 Sexual contexts for Sonnet 2 Sonnet 2 in politics and religion Friends and elegies: Reading Sonnet 2 among epitaphs 4. John Benson's sonnet sequences (Poems: Written by Wil. Shake-speare. Gent.) Benson and Shakespeare Part I: Eternity of beauty Part II: Miscellaneity and duality Part III: A Marriage of perjured minds Part IV: Classics and imputed works 5. Celebrations of Church and King: An early Cambridge reader Reading habits and approaches Cambridge origins Poems in praise of God Poems to honour the King Contextualizing women For the love of God, not woman 6. Restoration revisions: Musical, dramatic, and miscellany readings Mountebanks and martyrs: Lawes' musical setting Gender, duplicity, and eternal passion: Suckling's Brennoralt Manuscript variants and textual fluidity: Reading and sharing Extracts, miscellanies, and new contexts: Adapting the sonnets in the late seventeenth century 7. Supplementing Shakespeare and creating the canon Critical predilections: The autobiographical Shakespeare Life after Benson: Supplements and supplementarity Notes and Various Readings: The ultimate supplement Capell's cento and Shakespeare's language Collecting Shakespeare: Complete and incomplete canons 8. Edmond Malone: Plotting the Sonnets The Search for authorial authenticity Poems and plays The Editor and his characters 9. Reading the Sonnets after Malone: Independent responses Debating the poems: Critical annotations Sonnet sententiae Reading and editing the eighteenth century Beyond Malone: The New debate Sonnet Futures
The Passionate Pilgrim and Shakespeare's 'sugred' reputation
Texts and editions
Pilgrim as a sonnet sequence
Shakespeare's vendible name and relevant prints
Supplementing Shakespeare with the classics
Reading and revising the sonnets
Reading and Revising Shake-Speare's Sonnets (1609)
Structure, contexts, and paratexts of the 1609 quarto
Thorpe and the critics
Sonnets and sequences: Revisionist love stories
Reading Thorpe's Sonnet 2
Annotating the sonnets
The manuscripts of Sonnet 2: Sex, sonnets, and spirituality
Extant manuscript copies of Sonnet 2
Sexual contexts for Sonnet 2
Sonnet 2 in politics and religion
Friends and elegies: Reading Sonnet 2 among epitaphs
John Benson's sonnet sequences (Poems: Written by Wil. Shake-speare. Gent.)
Benson and Shakespeare
Part I: Eternity of beauty
Part II: Miscellaneity and duality
Part III: A Marriage of perjured minds
Part IV: Classics and imputed works
Celebrations of Church and King: An early Cambridge reader
Reading habits and approaches
Cambridge origins
Poems in praise of God
Poems to honour the King
Contextualizing women
For the love of God, not woman
Restoration revisions: Musical, dramatic, and miscellany readings
Mountebanks and martyrs: Lawes' musical setting
Gender, duplicity, and eternal passion: Suckling's Brennoralt
Manuscript variants and textual fluidity: Reading and sharing
Extracts, miscellanies, and new contexts: Adapting the sonnets in the late seventeenth century
Supplementing Shakespeare and creating the canon
Critical predilections: The autobiographical Shakespeare
Life after Benson: Supplements and supplementarity
Notes and Various Readings: The ultimate supplement
Capell's cento and Shakespeare's language
Collecting Shakespeare: Complete and incomplete canons
Edmond Malone: Plotting the Sonnets
The Search for authorial authenticity
Poems and plays
The Editor and his characters
Reading the Sonnets after Malone: Independent responses
Debating the poems: Critical annotations
Sonnet sententiae
Reading and editing the eighteenth century
Beyond Malone: The New debate
Sonnet Futures
The Author to the Reader Introduction: 'The Meaning' of the Sonnets The Sonnets, their texts, and their readers 1. The Passionate Pilgrim and Shakespeare's 'sugred' reputation Texts and editions Pilgrim as a sonnet sequence Shakespeare's vendible name and relevant prints Supplementing Shakespeare with the classics Reading and revising the sonnets 2. Reading and Revising Shake-Speare's Sonnets (1609) Structure, contexts, and paratexts of the 1609 quarto Thorpe and the critics Sonnets and sequences: Revisionist love stories Reading Thorpe's Sonnet 2 Annotating the sonnets 3. The manuscripts of Sonnet 2: Sex, sonnets, and spirituality Extant manuscript copies of Sonnet 2 Sexual contexts for Sonnet 2 Sonnet 2 in politics and religion Friends and elegies: Reading Sonnet 2 among epitaphs 4. John Benson's sonnet sequences (Poems: Written by Wil. Shake-speare. Gent.) Benson and Shakespeare Part I: Eternity of beauty Part II: Miscellaneity and duality Part III: A Marriage of perjured minds Part IV: Classics and imputed works 5. Celebrations of Church and King: An early Cambridge reader Reading habits and approaches Cambridge origins Poems in praise of God Poems to honour the King Contextualizing women For the love of God, not woman 6. Restoration revisions: Musical, dramatic, and miscellany readings Mountebanks and martyrs: Lawes' musical setting Gender, duplicity, and eternal passion: Suckling's Brennoralt Manuscript variants and textual fluidity: Reading and sharing Extracts, miscellanies, and new contexts: Adapting the sonnets in the late seventeenth century 7. Supplementing Shakespeare and creating the canon Critical predilections: The autobiographical Shakespeare Life after Benson: Supplements and supplementarity Notes and Various Readings: The ultimate supplement Capell's cento and Shakespeare's language Collecting Shakespeare: Complete and incomplete canons 8. Edmond Malone: Plotting the Sonnets The Search for authorial authenticity Poems and plays The Editor and his characters 9. Reading the Sonnets after Malone: Independent responses Debating the poems: Critical annotations Sonnet sententiae Reading and editing the eighteenth century Beyond Malone: The New debate Sonnet Futures
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