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Understanding McLuhan
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Understanding McLuhan (1996)(Voyager)[Mac-PC].iso
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08903_Field_TCGG T668.txt
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1996-04-10
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952b
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16 lines
More double talk was seldom put in thirty-odd words than
in these words of dedication. Similar irony occurs in a preface
to Shakespeare’s Troilus and Cressida , which appeared in front
of the quarto text of 1609, the same year as the sonnets. It
does not concern us here whether Shakespeare wrote this
preface. It is too witty for Dekker, too restrained for Nashe. It is
much on our theme of print as an engine of immortality:
A never writer, to an ever reader, Newes. Eternall
reader, you have heere a new play, never estal’d with the
Stage, never clapper-clawd with the palmes of the vulgar,
and yet passing full of the palme comicall; for it is a birth
of your braine, that never under-tooke anything
commicall, vainlly: And were but the vaine names of
commedies changde for the titles of Commodities, or of
Playes for Pleas; you should see all those grand censors,