<p>"Intriguing ⌠Chartier's elegant analysis of 'the story of a lost play' is predicated upon the disjunction between Renaissance literary production and post-Romantic ideas of authorship that obsess about the creative genius of the single author who breathes originality into a work that remains recognisably and forever, his own."<br /> <i><b>Times Higher Education</b></i><br /> <br /> "Roger Chartier is one of our most enthralling historians of the book. <i>Cardenio between Cervantes and Shakespeare</i> is a brilliant investigation of elusive textual traces across borders, languages, and centuries. Chartier has written an essential case study of the pleasures and perils of cultural mobility."<br /> <b>Stephen Greenblatt, Harvard University</b></p> <p>"In this magnificent new book, Roger Chartier extends cultural history into unexplored territory, a pre-modern world where texts proliferated promiscuously, crossing genres, languages, and publics in ways undreamt of today, except by writers like Borges. Chartier challenges the notions of fixed authorship and authoritative texts in a tour of literature between Cervantes and Shakespeare that will surprise and delight readers inside and outside the Academy."<br /> <b>Robert Darnton, Harvard University<br /> <br /> </b>"The great contribution of Chartierâs book is to treat the Shakespearean and Theobaldean Cardenios as two among many versions of this story, for it seems that Cervantesâs convoluted novella caught the imaginations of readers and spectators across Europe and even in the New World."<br /> <b>Adrian Johns, University of Chicago</b></p>