Book contents
- The New Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson
- The New Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Short Titles and Note on the Text and Cover Art
- Introduction: Contemporary Johnson
- Chapter 1 Johnson, Ethics, and Living
- Chapter 2 Johnson and the Essay
- Chapter 3 Johnson and Renaissance Humanism
- Chapter 4 Johnson and Language
- Chapter 5 Johnson and British Historiography
- Chapter 6 Johnson and Fiction
- Chapter 7 Johnson and Gender
- Chapter 8 Johnson, Race, and Slavery
- Chapter 9 Johnson’s Politics
- Chapter 10 Johnson’s Poetry
- Chapter 11 Johnson’s Editions of Shakespeare
- Chapter 12 Johnson’s Lives of the Poets: A Guided Tour
- Chapter 13 Johnson as Biographer
- Chapter 14 Johnson and Travel
- Chapter 15 Johnson and Disability
- Chapter 16 Representing Johnson in Life and After
- Chapter 17 Johnson among the Scholars
- Further Reading
- Index
- Cambridge Companions To …
Chapter 11 - Johnson’s Editions of Shakespeare
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2022
- The New Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson
- The New Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Short Titles and Note on the Text and Cover Art
- Introduction: Contemporary Johnson
- Chapter 1 Johnson, Ethics, and Living
- Chapter 2 Johnson and the Essay
- Chapter 3 Johnson and Renaissance Humanism
- Chapter 4 Johnson and Language
- Chapter 5 Johnson and British Historiography
- Chapter 6 Johnson and Fiction
- Chapter 7 Johnson and Gender
- Chapter 8 Johnson, Race, and Slavery
- Chapter 9 Johnson’s Politics
- Chapter 10 Johnson’s Poetry
- Chapter 11 Johnson’s Editions of Shakespeare
- Chapter 12 Johnson’s Lives of the Poets: A Guided Tour
- Chapter 13 Johnson as Biographer
- Chapter 14 Johnson and Travel
- Chapter 15 Johnson and Disability
- Chapter 16 Representing Johnson in Life and After
- Chapter 17 Johnson among the Scholars
- Further Reading
- Index
- Cambridge Companions To …
Summary
Johnson’s stand against prejudice is reflected in the critical and editorial aspects of his “Shakespeare.” His editions contain the distinguished Preface and notes and express Johnson’s dialogue with earlier editions. This chapter considers Johnson on the methods of Pope, Theobald, Hanmer, and Warburton and suggests the collaborative nature of Johnson’s contributions. Defending “the dull duty of an editor,” Johnson concedes the task is impossible, and his later editions display second thoughts, generally favoring conservative readings. Johnson’s notes are varied and clarify meanings through paraphrase, with examples from Measure for Measure and Othello, the latter exemplifying Johnson’s sensitivity to female suffering. The central criterion of Johnson’s criticism – “general nature” – is then addressed. The essay concludes with detailed analysis of the death of Cardinal Beaufort from Henry VI Part 2, a scene heavily marked up by Johnson in his Warburton and described as “scarcely the work of any pen but Shakespeare’s.”
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- The New Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson , pp. 150 - 163Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022