Late last year, Taylor shocked readers once again. The New Oxford Shakespeare, for which Taylor serves as lead general editor, is the first edition of the plays to credit Christopher Marlowe as a co-author of Shakespeare's "Henry VI," Parts 1, 2, and 3. It lists co-authors for fourteen other plays as well, ushering a host of playwrights-Thomas Nashe, George Peele, Thomas Heywood, Ben Jonson, George Wilkins, Thomas Middleton, and John Fletcher, along with Marlowe-into the big tent of the complete works. This past fall, headlines around the world trumpeted the Marlowe-Shakespeare connection, and spotlighted the editors' methodology: computer-aided analysis of linguistic patterns across databases of early modern plays. "Shakespeare has now fully entered the era of Big Data," Taylor announced in a press release.
It's no longer controversial to give other authors a share in Shakespeare's plays-not because he was a front for an aristocrat, as conspiracy theorists since the Victorian era have proposed, but because scholars have come to recognize that writing a play in the sixteenth century was a bit like writing a screenplay today, with many hands revising a company's product. The New Oxford Shakespeare claims that its algorithms can tease out the work of individual hands-a possibility, although there are reasons to challenge its computational methods. But there is a deeper argument made by the edition that is both less definitive and more interesting. It's not just that Shakespeare collaborated with other playwrights, and it's not just that Shakespeare was one of a number of great Renaissance writers whose fame he outstripped in the ensuing centuries. It's that the canonization of Shakespeare has made his way of telling stories-especially his monarch-centered view of history-seem like the norm to us, when there are other ways of telling stories, and other ways of staging history, that other playwrights did better.