'… a fine primer for the Shakespearean era.' Reference Reviews
'… will prove useful for both undergraduates and graduate teaching. The volume is framed by a convenient chronology and a thoughtfully prepared bibliography that guide readers both back to formative early publications and forward to a solid selection of more recent work.' Shakespeare Quarterly
'A well-informed and variously interesting survey on the Elizabethan theatre.' Daniela Guardamagna, Memori Di Shakespeare
'The Companion's achievement is twofold: it introduces the reader to a variety of dramatists contemporary with Shakespeare but much less often studied, and it disproves the idea, prevalent for centuries, of Shakespeare as an isolated genius who worked on his own. In the days before copyright, Shakespeare and his colleagues frequently had a finger in one another's plays, to an extent that renders attribution a far more complicated question than it is generally considered. This realisation is a key to understanding early modern drama, and this book conveys it with efficiency and panache.' Mette Sjölin, English Studies
"This volume of essays situates Shakespeare in the context of his too often overlooked contemporary playwrights: Lyly, Peele, Green, Lodge, Nashe, Kyd, Marlowe, Jonson, Marston, Dekker, Heywood, Chapman, Beaumont, Fletcher, Middleton, Webster, Ford, Massinger, and Brome. The 16 concise essays focus primarily on individual writers, but with a productive emphasis on the links between them, including collaboration, competition, imitation, and parody." Choice
"… a fine primer for the Shakespearean era." Reference Reviews
"… will prove useful for both undergraduates and graduate teaching. The volume is framed by a convenient chronology and a thoughtfully prepared bibliography that guide readers both back to formative early publications and forward to a solid selection of more recent work." Shakespeare Quarterly
"A well-informed and variously interesting survey on the Elizabethan theatre." Daniela Guardamagna, Memori Di Shakespeare
"The Companion’s achievement is twofold: it introduces the reader to a variety of dramatists contemporary with Shakespeare but much less often studied, and it disproves the idea, prevalent for centuries, of Shakespeare as an isolated genius who worked on his own. In the days before copyright, Shakespeare and his colleagues frequently had a finger in one another’s plays, to an extent that renders attribution a far more complicated question than it is generally considered. This realisation is a key to understanding early modern drama, and this book conveys it with efficiency and panache." Mette Sjölin, English Studies