Date
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England
Great Britain
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Folger call number: PR658.L6 L67 2014
Folger holdings ID: 491643
Summary
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General notes
Includes bibliographical references and index
Contents
Machine generated contents note: -- AcknowledgementsNotes on the ContributorsA Note on ConventionIntroduction Nothing Will Come of Nothing? Or, What Can We Learn from Plays that Don't Exist?; David McInnis and Matthew Steggle PART I: WHAT IS A LOST PLAY?1.What's a Lost Play?: Toward a Taxonomy of Lost Plays; William Proctor Williams2.Ur-Plays and other exercises in Making Stuff Up; Roslyn L. Knutson3.What is Lost of Shakespearean Plays, Besides a Few Titles?; Andrew Gurr4.Lost, or Rather Surviving as a Very Short Document; Matthew Steggle5.Lumpers and Splitters; John H. AstingtonPART II: WORKING WITH LOST PLAYS 6.'2 Fortune's Tennis' and the Admiral's Men; David McInnis7.Brute Parts: From Troy to Britain at the Rose, 1595-1600; Misha Teramura8.The Admiral's Lost Arthurian Plays; Paul Whitfield White9.Lost Plays and the Repertory of Lord Strange's Men; Lawrence Manley10.Thomas Watson, Playwright: Origins of Modern English Drama; Michael J. Hirrel11.Lost Stage Friars and their Narratives; Christopher Matusiak12.Reimagining Gillian: The Merry Wives of Windsor and the Lost 'Friar Fox and Gillian of Brentford'; Christi Spain-SavagePART III: MOVING FORWARD13.Where to Find Lost Plays; Martin WigginsBibliographyIndex
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Related names
editor: McInnis, David
editor: Steggle, Matthew