Cambridge University Press, 1994. — 208 p. — ISBN 0521417376, 9780521417372, 0521033861, 9780521033862, 9780511518942.
This book introduces a new method for determining the authorship of Renaissance plays. Based on the rapid rate of change in English grammar in the late-sixteenth and early-seventeenth centuries, socio-historical linguistic evidence allows us to distinguish the hands of Renaissance playwrights within play texts. The present study focuses on Shakespeare, his collaborations with Fletcher and Middleton, and the apocryphal plays. Among the plays examined are Henry VIII, The Two Noble Kinsmen, Macbeth, Pericles, and Sir Thomas More. Using graphs to present statistical data in a readily comprehensible form, the book also contains a wealth of information about the history of the English language during a period of rapid and far-reaching change.
Methodology
The auxiliary 'do'
Relative markers
'Thou' and 'you'
Applications
Shakespeare as collaborator
The Shakespeare-Fletcher collaborations
The Shakespeare-Middleton collaborations
The Shakespeare apocrypha
The 1664 folio plays
Other apocryphal plays
Summary of findings
Statistical appendix