Something as mundane as oysters and hazelnuts revealed a theater from the greatest age of English drama, what the scholar Daniel Swift describes in his brilliant new book, The Dream Factory: London’s First Playhouse and the Making of William Shakespeare, as effectively 'the remnants of 16th-century popcorn' ... An estimably material interpretation of literary history, this book places Shakespeare in a fascinating economic context, whereby the Theater is the workshop (or studio) where he learns his trade ... The Dream Factory is an indispensable account of a chaotic and creative period in which feudalism was transitioning into capitalism, with the entertainment industry one of the salient harbingers of that shift.
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