Overview
John Ford's tragedy, first printed in 1633, is the first major English
play to take as its theme a subject still rarely handled: fulfilled
incest between brother and sister. It is one of the most studied and
performed of all plays of the period, and has been successfully adapted
for film and radio. The Revels plays edition by Derek Roper has been the
standard scholarly edition since it appeared in 1975.
This new
edition uses the same authoritative text, but with notes designed for
modern undergraduate use. The substantial introduction has been
completely rewritten to take account of the studies and new approaches
of the last twenty years. It presents the play as an 'interrogative
text', in which subversive meanings are inscribed within an apparently
orthodox narrative; as a courageous treatment of forbidden love; and as
an achieved work of Baroque art.