Difference between revisions of "Bibliography"

m (BGreatley-Hirsch moved page Works Cited to Bibliography without leaving a redirect)
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== C ==
== Getting started ==
 
Readers interested in authorship attribution – its history, theories, methods – may be intimidated by the sheer quantity of scholarship. The following titles are recommended as introductory reading.
 
 
 
== Works Cited ==
 
This section supplies bibliographical information for scholarship cited in CADRE entries.
 
 
=== C ===
* Craig, Hugh, ‘Shakespeare’s Vocabulary: Myth and Reality’, ''Shakespeare Quarterly'', 62.1 (2011), 53–74.
* Craig, Hugh, ‘Shakespeare’s Vocabulary: Myth and Reality’, ''Shakespeare Quarterly'', 62.1 (2011), 53–74.


== E ==
=== E ===
* Elliott, Ward E.Y., and Robert J. Valenza, ‘Shakespeare’s Vocabulary: Did It Dwarf All Others?’, in ''Stylistics and Shakespeare’s Language: Transdisciplinary Approaches'', ed. by Mireille Ravassat and Jonathan Culpeper (London: Continuum), pp. 34–57.
* Elliott, Ward E.Y., and Robert J. Valenza, ‘Shakespeare’s Vocabulary: Did It Dwarf All Others?’, in ''Stylistics and Shakespeare’s Language: Transdisciplinary Approaches'', ed. by Mireille Ravassat and Jonathan Culpeper (London: Continuum), pp. 34–57.


== G ==
=== G ===
* Greatley-Hirsch, Brett, ‘Computational Studies’, in ''The Arden Research Handbook of Contemporary Shakespeare Criticism'', ed. by Evelyn Gajowski (London: Arden Shakespeare, 2020), pp. 205–21.
* Greatley-Hirsch, Brett, ‘Computational Studies’, in ''The Arden Research Handbook of Contemporary Shakespeare Criticism'', ed. by Evelyn Gajowski (London: Arden Shakespeare, 2020), pp. 205–21.


== K ==
=== K ===
* Kahan, Jeffrey, ‘“I tell you what mine author says”: A Brief History of Stylometrics’, ''ELH'', 82.3 (2015), 815–44.
* Kahan, Jeffrey, ‘“I tell you what mine author says”: A Brief History of Stylometrics’, ''ELH'', 82.3 (2015), 815–44.



Revision as of 20:06, 3 September 2021

Getting started

Readers interested in authorship attribution – its history, theories, methods – may be intimidated by the sheer quantity of scholarship. The following titles are recommended as introductory reading.


Works Cited

This section supplies bibliographical information for scholarship cited in CADRE entries.


C

  • Craig, Hugh, ‘Shakespeare’s Vocabulary: Myth and Reality’, Shakespeare Quarterly, 62.1 (2011), 53–74.

E

  • Elliott, Ward E.Y., and Robert J. Valenza, ‘Shakespeare’s Vocabulary: Did It Dwarf All Others?’, in Stylistics and Shakespeare’s Language: Transdisciplinary Approaches, ed. by Mireille Ravassat and Jonathan Culpeper (London: Continuum), pp. 34–57.

G

  • Greatley-Hirsch, Brett, ‘Computational Studies’, in The Arden Research Handbook of Contemporary Shakespeare Criticism, ed. by Evelyn Gajowski (London: Arden Shakespeare, 2020), pp. 205–21.

K

  • Kahan, Jeffrey, ‘“I tell you what mine author says”: A Brief History of Stylometrics’, ELH, 82.3 (2015), 815–44.