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'Speak, that I may see thee': Shakespeare characters and common words

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posted on 2025-05-09, 18:46 authored by David CraigDavid Craig
Recording the number of times a particular word or phrase is used in a passage, or the relative frequency of a metrical feature or of a rhetorical figure, has been a familiar practice in Shakespeare studies for at least a century. This sort of measurement and comparison is a staple of authorship studies. Along the way these practices have suffered some swingeing blows, such as Sir E. K. Chambers’s attack of 1924 on the ‘disintegrators’, Samuel Schoenbaum’s ridicule of the ‘parallelographic school’ in the 1960s, and Brian Vickers’s recent demolition of the case for Shakespeare’s authorship of A Funerall Elegie. Nevertheless, they have proved indispensable (when soundly practised) as a complement to documentary evidence and to subjective estimates of what is, or is not, the authentic style of a particular writer. Statistical work plays a large part in Gary Taylor’s Textual Companion to the Oxford Shakespeare (Oxford, 1980), and in important recent books by Vickers himself and by MacDonald P. Jackson. It is sympathetically assessed in Harold Love’s Attributing Authorship: An Introduction (Cambridge, 2002).

History

Journal title

Shakespeare Survey

Volume

61

Pagination

281-288

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Education and Arts

School

School of Humanities and Social Science

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