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Folger Shakespeare Library: Shakespeare Unlimited

Shakespeare and his contemporaries, with Darren Freebury-Jones

Folger Shakespeare Library: Shakespeare Unlimited

Folger Shakespeare Library

Arts

4.7 • 837 Ratings

🗓️ 19 December 2024

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

What does it mean to be called an “upstart crow”? In 1592, a pamphlet titled Greene’s groats-worth of witte described William Shakespeare, in the first allusion to him as a playwright, with this phrase, calling him “an upstart crow, beautified with our feathers.” This phrase sparked centuries of speculation. As Darren Freebury-Jones explores in his book, Shakespeare’s borrowed feathers: How early modern playwrights shaped the world’s greatest writer, Shakespeare’s so-called borrowing was neither unusual for the time nor a weakness—it was ultimately a testament to his genius. Exploring how Shakespeare navigated a competitive theatrical scene in early modern England, Freebury-Jones reveals the ways in which Shakespeare reshaped the works of contemporaries like John Lyly, Thomas Kyd, and Christopher Marlowe into something distinctly his own. By combining traditional literary analysis with cutting-edge digital tools, he uncovers echoes of Lyly’s witty comedies and gender-bending heroines, Kyd’s tragic revenge dramas, and Marlowe’s powerful verse in Shakespeare’s early plays. This episode sheds light on Shakespeare’s role as a responsive and innovative playwright deeply embedded in the early modern theatrical community. Listen in to learn more about the influences on the “upstart crow” as he created a canon of timeless works. Dr Darren Freebury-Jones is author of the monographs: Reading Robert Greene: Recovering Shakespeare’s Rival (Routledge), Shakespeare’s Tutor: The Influence of Thomas Kyd (Manchester University Press), and Shakespeare’s Borrowed Feathers (Manchester University Press). He is Associate Editor for the first critical edition of The Collected Works of Thomas Kyd since 1901 (Boydell and Brewer). He has also investigated the boundaries of John Marston’s dramatic corpus as part of the Oxford Marston project and is General Editor for The Collected Plays of Robert Greene (Edinburgh University Press). His findings on the works of Shakespeare and his contemporaries have been discussed in national newspapers such as The Times, The Guardian, The Telegraph, The Observer, and The Independent as well as BBC Radio. His debut poetry collection, Rambling (Broken Sleep Books), was published in 2024. In 2023 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society in recognition of his contributions to historical scholarship.

Transcript

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0:00.0

From the Folger Shakespeare Library, this is Shakespeare Unlimited.

0:05.0

I'm Barbara Bogave.

0:07.0

It turns out the earliest reference in print to William Shakespeare as a playwright isn't in a script or a playbill.

0:15.0

It comes to us in a pamphlet from 1592 called Green's Grotesworth of Witt,

0:20.0

and it's allegedly written by fellow

0:21.5

playwright Robert Green, although no one really knows who wrote it since it came out after Green's

0:26.6

death. At any right, it describes Shakespeare as an upstart crow, beautified with our feathers,

0:33.1

which if you're not hip to Elizabethan shade, means he was a plagiarist.

0:42.1

Or maybe it does. I mean, no one knows for sure what the author of Greens, Grotesworth really meant. In fact, the whole concept of plagiarism wouldn't make much sense to early

0:48.3

modern playwrights. They were too busy borrowing plots, characters, and poetry from each other

0:53.3

to sell tickets and to get

0:54.8

butts into seats. But all of this cross-pollination has come into sharper focus, as the tools of

1:01.3

computer analysis have gotten better and better. New technology makes it possible for researchers

1:06.2

to find all the shared words and phrases between various texts, even if they're not exact repetitions.

1:13.5

The scholar Darren Freeberry Jones uses these new tools, as well as old-fashioned literary analysis

1:19.5

in his book Shakespeare's Borrowed Feathers.

1:22.8

Freeberry Jones gives us a view of Shakespeare as a working playwright within a network

1:27.1

of contemporaries and

1:28.3

competitors. And far from diminishing Shakespeare's originality, Freebury Jones shows us just how

1:34.7

brilliantly he refashioned his secondhand materials. Darren, it is wonderful to have you on the podcast.

1:41.4

Barbara, it is fabulous to meet you. I'm a big fan, and it's such a privilege to be invited to be a guest on this Paragon of Shakespeare podcast.

1:51.0

Oh, get out of here.

...

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