Description
Early Modern Media Ecology examines Shakespeare’s plays within the broader context of Renaissance communication systems and technological networks. Peter W. Marx investigates how theatrical performance functioned as a medium embedded in a complex ecology of print, manuscript culture, and oral transmission.
The work explores how playtexts were created, circulated, and consumed across multiple platforms—from the playhouse stage to printed quartos and folios. Marx considers how actors, audiences, printers, and patrons participated in a dynamic media system that shaped both the creation and reception of Shakespeare’s works.
By situating performance within this media ecology, Marx reveals new insights into how Early Modern theatre engaged with contemporary communication practices and cultural anxieties about textuality, authorship, and reproduction. This approach challenges traditional literary and theatrical criticism by emphasizing the material and technological dimensions of Shakespeare’s dramatic production.







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