Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Shakespeare the Historian
- The Decline of the Chronicle and Shakespeare's History Plays
- Rites of Oblivion in Shakespearian History Plays
- Richard II's Yorkist Editors
- Mapping the Globe: The Cartographic Gaze and Shakespeare's Henry IV Part 1
- Falstaff's Belly: Pathos, Prosthetics and Performance
- ‘And is Old Double Dead?’: Nation and Nostalgia in Henry IV Part 2
- Performing the Conflated Text of Henry IV: The Fortunes of Part Two
- Medley History: The Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth to Henry V
- Georgic Sovereignty in Henry V
- The Troublesome Reign, Richard II, and the Date of King John: A Study in Intertextuality
- The Trials of Queen Katherine in Henry VIII
- ‘Watch Out for Two-handed Swords’: Double-Edged Poetics in Howard Barker's Henry V in Two Parts (1971)
- Daunted at a Woman's Sight?: The Use and Abuse of Female Presence in Performances of the Histories as Cycles
- The RSC's ‘Glorious Moment’ and the Making of Shakespearian History
- Shakespeare as War Memorial: Remembrance and commemoration in the Great War
- Shakespearian Biography, Biblical Allusion and Early Modern Practices of Reading Scripture
- Filling in the ‘Wife-Shaped Void’: The Contemporary Afterlife of Anne Hathaway
- Shakespeare and Machiavelli: A Caveat
- Shame and Reflection in Montaigne and Shakespeare
- Playing the Law for Lawyers: Witnessing, Evidence and the Law of Contract in The Comedy of Errors
- Shakespeare's Narcissus: Omnipresent Love in Venus and Adonis
- Surface Tensions: Ceremony and Shame in Much Ado About Nothing
- ‘Remember Me’: Shylock on the Postwar German Stage
- ‘Dangerous and Rebel Prince’: A Television Adaptation of Hamlet in Late Francoist Spain
- What Shakespeare Did with the Queen's Men's King Leir and When
- Re-cognizing Leontes
- Shakespeare Performances in England 2009
- Professional Shakespeare Productions in the British Isles, January–December 2008
- The Year's Contribution to Shakespeare Studies 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare in Performance
- 3 Editions and Textual Studies
- Index to Volume 63
3 - Editions and Textual Studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2010
- Frontmatter
- Shakespeare the Historian
- The Decline of the Chronicle and Shakespeare's History Plays
- Rites of Oblivion in Shakespearian History Plays
- Richard II's Yorkist Editors
- Mapping the Globe: The Cartographic Gaze and Shakespeare's Henry IV Part 1
- Falstaff's Belly: Pathos, Prosthetics and Performance
- ‘And is Old Double Dead?’: Nation and Nostalgia in Henry IV Part 2
- Performing the Conflated Text of Henry IV: The Fortunes of Part Two
- Medley History: The Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth to Henry V
- Georgic Sovereignty in Henry V
- The Troublesome Reign, Richard II, and the Date of King John: A Study in Intertextuality
- The Trials of Queen Katherine in Henry VIII
- ‘Watch Out for Two-handed Swords’: Double-Edged Poetics in Howard Barker's Henry V in Two Parts (1971)
- Daunted at a Woman's Sight?: The Use and Abuse of Female Presence in Performances of the Histories as Cycles
- The RSC's ‘Glorious Moment’ and the Making of Shakespearian History
- Shakespeare as War Memorial: Remembrance and commemoration in the Great War
- Shakespearian Biography, Biblical Allusion and Early Modern Practices of Reading Scripture
- Filling in the ‘Wife-Shaped Void’: The Contemporary Afterlife of Anne Hathaway
- Shakespeare and Machiavelli: A Caveat
- Shame and Reflection in Montaigne and Shakespeare
- Playing the Law for Lawyers: Witnessing, Evidence and the Law of Contract in The Comedy of Errors
- Shakespeare's Narcissus: Omnipresent Love in Venus and Adonis
- Surface Tensions: Ceremony and Shame in Much Ado About Nothing
- ‘Remember Me’: Shylock on the Postwar German Stage
- ‘Dangerous and Rebel Prince’: A Television Adaptation of Hamlet in Late Francoist Spain
- What Shakespeare Did with the Queen's Men's King Leir and When
- Re-cognizing Leontes
- Shakespeare Performances in England 2009
- Professional Shakespeare Productions in the British Isles, January–December 2008
- The Year's Contribution to Shakespeare Studies 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare in Performance
- 3 Editions and Textual Studies
- Index to Volume 63
Summary
This has not been a good year for the texts of Romeo and Juliet. Apparently, though, the worst is not so long as we can say ‘this is the worst’. I was ready to pronounce an edition prepared by two relatively inexperienced editors, in which I found forty-one substantive errors (see below), the worst edition under review. And yet, that distinction belongs, utterly surprisingly, to the work of a veteran editor: Jay Halio's new parallel-texts edition of Romeo and Juliet contains an astounding 108 errors in the text of the play.
The experience of reading Halio's edition is an emotionally variegated one for a critic concerned with textual accuracy. I laughed at the howlers (e.g. instead of calling for a mattock as he enters the tomb, Friar Laurence requests a ‘hammock’, Q1 5.2.21; his poison resides not in the infant rind of a weak flower but in its ‘instant rind’, Q1 2.2.23); I cried at the invented words (e.g. at Q1 1.1.222 ‘with beauty’ unaccountably becomes ‘with heaven's beauty’; ‘rest’ at Q2 4.5.6 becomes ‘sleep’); and I got angry at variants appearing in lines which are identical in Q1 and Q2 (e.g. whereas both Q1 and Q2 read ‘I lent him’ at 2.2.81, Halio's text of Q1 reads ‘I gave him’; both Q1 and Q2 read ‘poison’ at 4.3.20 but Halio's Q1 reads ‘potion’). All told, I found seventeen lines with invented words, twenty-one lines with omitted words, twenty transpositions, ten instances in which a different preposition is substituted for the one in the copy-text, an omitted line (at Q2 2.4.127 add ‘him than he was when you sought him; I’), and thirty-nine further assorted textual errors. A parallel-text edition of Q1 and Q2 has obvious potential utility, but the unfortunate textual editing throughout renders this one all but useless.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Shakespeare Survey , pp. 416 - 421Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010