Authorship and Appropriation: Writing for the Stage in England, 1660-1710The author argues that the period in England, from 1660 to 1710, saw the move towards modern attitudes to dramatic art. This required authors to be the sole begetters of their works. The author also explores developments in the theatrical marketplace. |
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Page 172
... Speakers ' . Here the critical argument breaks down as the political takes over : ' And what if I had a mind to pass over the Clergy and Nobility of France in silence , and to excuse them from joyning in so illegal and so ungodly a ...
... Speakers ' . Here the critical argument breaks down as the political takes over : ' And what if I had a mind to pass over the Clergy and Nobility of France in silence , and to excuse them from joyning in so illegal and so ungodly a ...
Contents
Prologue I | 11 |
The Proprieties of Appropriation | 32 |
Plagiarism and Property | 96 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Account acknowledged adaptation amateurs appeared appropriation authorship borrowing called Cambridge Catalogue century Characters Charles claim collaboration collection Comedies Company contemporary copy Corneille critical cultural dedication drama dramatic Dramatick dramatists Dryden Duke of Guise Earl earlier early edition English epilogues Fletcher folio foreign French George Gildon History individual John Jonson King Langbaine Langbaine's Language late later less Letters literary Lives London Lord Love materials Nature never Oedipus original Oxford performance period piece plagiarism Playes plays playwrights Plot Poems Poets political practice preface present printed production professional prologue publication published reader Restoration revision Richard Robert romances Scene scripts Settle seventeenth seventeenth-century Shadwell Shakespeare sources Stage Story Studies theatre theatrical theft third Thomas thought tion title-page Tragedy translation University Press vols volume writers written