Shakespeare at Thirty
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Beschreibung
Produktdetails
Einband
Gebundene Ausgabe
Erscheinungsdatum
20.10.2026
Verlag
Princeton University PressSeitenzahl
352
Maße (L/B)
23,5/15,6 cm
Sprache
Englisch
ISBN
978-0-691-23327-7
A revelatory portrait of Shakespeare’s life before he achieved fame
Shakespeare at Thirty offers an original account of Shakespeare’s early career by returning to a moment before his fame was assured: the spring of 1594, when he turned thirty amid plague closures, censorship, social upheaval, financial insecurity, and professional uncertainty. Instead of reading Shakespeare’s beginnings through the lens of later achievement, Rory Loughnane reconstructs the precarious world in which a young actor-writer learned his craft and forged a path through a rapidly developing theatre scene.
Drawing on recent advances in textual scholarship, biography, and theatre history, the book sets Shakespeare’s early plays and poems within the collaborative literary networks and volatile theatre world of late-Elizabethan London. It examines the forms of co-authorship underlying many of Shakespeare’s early works; the pressures that plague, censorship, and the authorities put on those working in the theatre; the economics of patronage; and the emerging commercial structures that enabled the repertory system. Above all, it describes a young author who was talented but far from secure, shaped by peers, circumstance, and contingency as much as by innate genius.
By offering a rare biographical and critical portrait of the dramatist before he became a cultural icon, Shakespeare at Thirty restores uncertainty to Shakespeare’s twenties, revealing how he had to grapple with questions of direction, opportunity, and ambition that confront all young artists, and challenging the narratives of inevitability that dominate many Shakespeare biographies. The result sheds new light on his early career—and reminds us that Shakespeare, too, had to become himself.
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