Shakespeare and authorial networks in early modern drama

Meghan C Andrews author Sarah Neville editor Elizabeth Zeman Kolkovich editor Alan B Farmer editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Manchester University Press

Publishing:20th Oct '26

£25.00

This title is due to be published on 20th October, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Shakespeare and authorial networks in early modern drama cover

Shakespeare and authorial networks in early modern drama examines how intertextual exchanges shaped Shakespeare’s plays. Drawing on social network theory, it traces his sustained creative dialogue with Michael Drayton, John Marston and George Chapman, showing how shared discourses at cultural institutions and within patronage families informed recurring topics across their works. The study argues that Shakespeare’s engagement with institutional and social environments did not require direct membership or patronage; instead, looser ties influenced his authorship. By revealing how thematic and stylistic developments emerged through long-term conversations among playwrights, the book offers new insight into Shakespeare’s writing process and collaborative practices. It provides alternative models of authorship, influence and literary exchange that nuance conventional accounts of early modern patronage and highlight the significance of networks in shaping dramatic production.

‘This thought-provoking book introduces us to a different Shakespeare, one in conversation with social networks circulating distinctive ideologies and artistic agendas. Such as one attached to the Middle Temple, where Warwickshire was strongly represented, connecting him with Drayton and Marston; another to the Sidney/Herbert circle, whose interest in neo-Stoicism clashed with Chapman's absolutism. A totally new perspective on Shakespeare and his contemporaries.’
—Richard Dutton, Ohio State University

ISBN: 9781526188793

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

256 pages