Douglas Bruster
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Douglas Bruster (born 1963) is an American literary critic and Shakespeare scholar. He is the Mody C. Boatright Regents Professor of American and English Literature and Distinguished Teaching Professor at The University of Texas at Austin where he researches the works of William Shakespeare and his contemporaries.


Early life and education

Bruster was raised in Norfolk, Nebraska, where he graduated from
Norfolk Senior High School Norfolk Senior High School is one of the largest high schools in northeastern Nebraska. Athletics Norfolk Senior High School is a member of the Nebraska School Activities Association and competes in the Heartland Athletic Conference. The school ...
in 1981. Attending the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, he majored in English, History, and Latin, graduating in 1985. Thereafter he attended Harvard University, where he studied English Renaissance literature with such professors as
G. Blakemore Evans Gwynne Blakemore Evans (31 March 1912 – 23 December 2005) was an American scholar of Elizabethan literature best known for editing the ''Riverside Shakespeare'' edition in 1974. Biography Evans was born on 31 March 1912 in Columbus, Ohio to Mar ...
, Marjorie B. Garber, and Roland Greene. Earning his M.A. during the course of his studies, he received his Ph.D. in 1990, writing on commercial themes and images in the plays of the early modern era in England.


Career

After appointments at the University of Chicago and the University of Texas at San Antonio, Bruster accepted a faculty position at the University of Texas at Austin in 1999, where he currently teaches. His publications focus on works of the early modern era in England, primarily those of Shakespeare and his contemporaries. Bruster's first monograph was published by Cambridge University Press in 1992: ''Drama and the Market in the Age of Shakespeare'' was the inaugural volume in the series Cambridge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture, reissued in paperback in 2005. Subsequent books have included ''Quoting Shakespeare: Form and Culture in Early Modern Drama'' (2000), ''Shakespeare and the Question of Culture: Early Modern Literature and the Cultural Turn'' (2003), and ''To Be or Not to Be'' (2007), a study of the famous soliloquy from '' Hamlet''. Bruster also collaborated on two studies with the German Shakespeare scholar wmde:Robert Weimann: ''Prologues to Shakespeare's Theatre: Performance and Liminality in Early Modern Drama'' (2005) and ''Shakespeare and the Power of Performance: Stage and Page in the Elizabethan Theatre'' (2008). In addition to these studies, Bruster has edited such early modern plays as Thomas Middleton and William Rowley's '' The Changeling'' for the Oxford University Press edition of ''Thomas Middleton: The Collected Works'' (2008), the morality plays '' Everyman'' and '' Mankind'' for the Arden Early Modern Drama series Shakespeare's (with Eric Rasmussen), and ''
A Midsummer Night's Dream ''A Midsummer Night's Dream'' is a comedy written by William Shakespeare 1595 or 1596. The play is set in Athens, and consists of several subplots that revolve around the marriage of Theseus and Hippolyta. One subplot involves a conflict amon ...
'' for
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (; HMH) is an American publisher of textbooks, instructional technology materials, assessments, reference works, and fiction and non-fiction for both young readers and adults. The company is based in the Financial Dist ...
(2012). In 2013, Bruster's 'Shakespearean Spellings and Handwriting in the Additional Passages Printed in the 1602 Spanish Tragedy' drew on orthographical evidence to argue for Shakespeare's authorship of the approximately 325 lines of the so-called Additional Passages printed in the 1602 quarto of
Thomas Kyd Thomas Kyd (baptised 6 November 1558; buried 15 August 1594) was an English playwright, the author of ''The Spanish Tragedy'', and one of the most important figures in the development of Elizabethan drama. Although well known in his own time, ...
's The Spanish Tragedy. This research was featured in a front-page story of The New York Times, and profiled in numerous outlets of the popular press, including National Public Radio, The Guardian, and The Atlantic Other significant articles include 'A New Chronology for Shakespeare's Plays' (2014) with Geneviève Smith, which advances a revised timeline for Shakespeare's drama on the basis of a constrained
correspondence analysis Correspondence analysis (CA) is a multivariate statistical technique proposed by Herman Otto Hartley (Hirschfeld) and later developed by Jean-Paul Benzécri. It is conceptually similar to principal component analysis, but applies to categorical rat ...
of the plays' punctuated pause patterns, and, the following year, ' Shakespeare's Lady 8,' which identifies and analyzes as a Shakespearean 'brand' the attractive printers' headpiece that adorned both '' Venus and Adonis'' and '' The Rape of Lucrece'' upon first publication. Bruster has been awarded many of his department, university, and state's top teaching awards, including the William O. Sutherland Award for excellence in teaching Masterworks of Literature, the Regents' Outstanding Teaching Award, the President's Teaching Award, and the Minnie Stevens Piper Professor Award for superior teaching at the college level.


Selected bibliography


Books

* * * * (with Robert Weimann) * * (with Robert Weimann)


References


External links

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Bruster, Douglas Living people 1963 births Shakespearean scholars 20th-century American non-fiction writers People from Norfolk, Nebraska University of Chicago faculty University of Texas at San Antonio faculty University of Texas at Austin faculty University of Nebraska alumni Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni