Reviews
"It is not, I think, overstating the case to say that the release of this edition feels epochal, and the sense of recognition at what it has added, as well as what it will inspire over the ensuing decades, is already palpable. The Oxford Middleton is a truly momentous work, and it is now inthe hands of you, the Great Variety of Readers." --Will Sharpe, The Shakespeare Bookshop Newsletter 03/01/2008, "The publication of The Complete Works of Middleton will be a major event for all those who care about the theatre of Shakespeare's time. The scholarship is meticulous, the commentary is fascinating and the international team of experts displays the field of Renaissance Drama studies at itsfinest. In modern times, productions of The Changeling and Women Beware Women have shown the dark side of sex and power that Shakespeare touched on but never fully explored. The Complete Works now shows us the full range of Middleton's talent for comedy and social drama and, controversially, thefull extent of his collaboration with and development of Shakespeare's plays." --Kathleen E. McLuskie, The Shakespeare Institute, "The publication of The Complete Works of Middleton will be a major event for all those who care about the theatre of Shakespeare's time. The scholarship is meticulous, the commentary is fascinating and the international team of experts displays the field of Renaissance Drama studies at itsfinest. In modern times, productions of The Changeling and Women Beware Women have shown the dark side of sex and power that Shakespeare touched on but never fully explored. The Complete Works now shows us the full range of Middleton's talent for comedy and social drama and, controversially, thefull extent of his collaboration with and development of Shakespeare's plays." --Kathleen E. McLuskie, The Shakespeare Institute 17/09/2007, "...elaborately cross-referenced...a good deal of effort has gone into making the Companion as user-friendly as possibe..." --Michael Neill LRB 16/12/2008, "All of us who care deeply about the history of English drama welcome with great enthusiasm and excitement the publication of the Collected Works of Thomas Middleton, a major achievement in textual scholarship that represents the collective expertise and critical wisdom of scholars from allover the world. Gary Taylor and his many collaborators have given us a new and remarkably versatile Thomas Middleton - a great tragic playwright, a brilliant creator of sly and cynical urban comedies, a thoroughly gifted man of the theater and citizen of London. With this massive collected edition,the history of English drama is much more complete and we can hope for many more professional productions of these neglected plays." --Gail Paster, Director, Folger Shakespeare Library 24/10/2007, "The Oxford Middleton is a monumental achievement. Gary Taylor and his team of scholars have managed to do for Thomas Middleton what Heminges and Condell did for Shakespeare in the 1623 First Folio: they've collected a great playwright's work in a landmark edition, one that enables us toappreciate afresh an extraordinary literary career. Taken together, The Collected Works of Thomas Middleton and its companion volume Thomas Middleton and Early Modern Textual Culture, provide an essential guide to matters at the heart of the English literary world in the early seventeenth century,from authorship and collaboration to censorship, civic pageantry, and the London book trade." --James Shapiro, author of 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare and Professor of English, Columbia University 25/10/2007, "The Oxford Middleton is a monumental achievement. Gary Taylor and his team of scholars have managed to do for Thomas Middleton what Heminges and Condell did for Shakespeare in the 1623 First Folio: they've collected a great playwright's work in a landmark edition, one that enables us toappreciate afresh an extraordinary literary career. Taken together, The Collected Works of Thomas Middleton and its companion volume Thomas Middleton and Early Modern Textual Culture, provide an essential guide to matters at the heart of the English literary world in the early seventeenth century,from authorship and collaboration to censorship, civic pageantry, and the London book trade." --James Shapiro, author of 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare and Professor of English, Columbia University, "Few editorial projects have been as eagerly anticipated as the Oxford Middleton, which will utterly transform how we understand early modern drama, both in the classroom and in our research. As with Shakespeare, Gary Taylor and his team have set a new gold standard for textual editing andinterpretive criticism, leaping from the 19th century to the 21st - finally an edition that captures Middleton's tremendous accomplishments." --Henry Turner, Rutgers University, New Jersey, author of The English Renaissance Stage: Geometry, Poetics, and the Practical Spatial Arts, 1580-1630 (Oxford, 2006) 04/09/2007, "It is hard to exaggerate the scale of the Oxford Middleton particularly since this is the kind of scholarship which is -- in its diversity and eclecticism -- designed to open up debate rather than close it off. It is a colossal achievement representing a decisive expansion of Renaissancstudies which will percolate throughout scholarship and teaching. But what is, perhaps, most exciting, is that the collection must surely generate a rediscovery of these eminently stageable plays in the theatre." --Andrew James Hartley, Editor, Shakespeare Bulletin 24/10/2007
Table of Content
Part I: The CulturePersonsEarly Modern Authorship: Canons and Chronologies(Un)Censoring in Detail: Middleton, Fetishism, and the Regulation of Dramatic Discourse'From Wronger and Wronged Have I Fee': Thomas Middleton and Early Modern Legal CultureMiddleton, Oral Culture, and the Manuscript EconomyVisual Texts: Middleton and PrintsManufactured Middleton: Texts in PrintTaking Liberties, Keeping Privileges: The Retail Book Trade, the State, and the Estate of Middleton, 1597-1627Booksellers without an Author, 1627-1685Fit for your Companies: Some Seventeenth-Century ReadersPart II: The TextsEditorial ProceduresWorks CitedTextual ApparatusTHE TEXTSPart III: Useful Middleton LinksMusic from Middleton's Texts edited by Andrew SabolAppendix I: Canon and ChronologyAppendix II: Early Allusions to Middleton's WorkIndexes, Part I: The CulturePersons, Gary TaylorEarly Modern Authorship: Canons and Chronologies, Mack. P. Jackson(Un)Censoring in Detail: Middleton, Fetishism, and the Regulation of Dramatic Discourse, Richard Burt'From Wronger and Wronged Have I Fee': Thomas Middleton and Early Modern Legal Culture, Edward GieskesMiddleton, Oral Culture, and the Manuscript Economy, Harold LoveVisual Texts: Middleton and Prints, John H. AstingtonManufactured Middleton: Texts in Print, Adrian WeissTaking Liberties, Keeping Privileges: The Retail Book Trade, the State, and the Estate of Middleton, 1597-1627, Cyndia Susan CleggBooksellers without an Author, 1627-1685, Maureen BellFit for your Companies: Some Seventeenth-Century Readers, John JowettPart II: The TextsEditorial ProceduresWorks CitedTextual ApparatusTHE TEXTSPart III: Useful Middleton LinksMusic from Middleton's Texts edited by Andrew SabolAppendix I: Canon and ChronologyAppendix II: Early Allusions to Middleton's WorkIndexes