'Drakakis finds the idea of 'source' or 'authority' too narrow. The sheer scope of materials to which Shakespeare had access, the the circumstances in which the playwright utilized them, he argues, mean that 'source' and 'authority' imply a 'quasi-theological' concept of creation. Instead of 'source' or 'authority', Drakakis offers 'resources', a term that, as he uses it, is much more open-ended. A resource could be a book, but it could also be a half-forgotten encounter or, in Shakespeare's case, the experience of having written an earlier play ... Each of his chapters is deeply engaged with the history of Shakespeare scholarship, on which he commentates with generosity and from which he quotes at length ... He closes on a musical metaphor, presenting Shakespeare as one who could 'repeat tunes, recall motifs to mind, imitate themes and memes, improvise on existing material and, on a number of occasions, innovate'.
Times Literary Supplement
Times Literary Supplement
Introduction
1 The legacy of Geoffrey Bullough
2 Myths of origin
3 Textual economies
4 Trafficking in intertextuality
5 The nature of con-text
6 From formula to text: Theatre, form, meme and reciprocity
7 The Thorello Plays: Shakespeare, Jonson and the circulation of theatrical ideas
8 Shakespeare as resource
Conclusion - The elephant in the graveyard
Bibliography
Index