Shakespeare: Text, Subtext, and ContextRonald L. Dotterer Susquehanna University Press, 1989 - 234 páginas Seventeen critics are represented in this collection of essays designed to illustrate the vitality and range of traditional and new approaches to Shakespeare studies. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 65
Página 7
... . BRITTIN Macbeth and Its Audience MICHAEL J. COLLINS The Critical Reception of Shakespeare's Tragedies in Twentieth - Century Germany RÜDIGER AHRENS 91 97 46 Revising a Map Misread : Hamlet , Romantic Self- Consciousness.
... . BRITTIN Macbeth and Its Audience MICHAEL J. COLLINS The Critical Reception of Shakespeare's Tragedies in Twentieth - Century Germany RÜDIGER AHRENS 91 97 46 Revising a Map Misread : Hamlet , Romantic Self- Consciousness.
Página 9
... audiences in his own times as well as in other times and places . One may learn from a distinguished authority many of the salient facts about the physical characteristics of Elizabethan theaters , and the arche- ological / historical ...
... audiences in his own times as well as in other times and places . One may learn from a distinguished authority many of the salient facts about the physical characteristics of Elizabethan theaters , and the arche- ological / historical ...
Página 11
... audience , aiming only for an increasingly larger audience for its contributors . Discussing several possible topics , the editorial board selected Shake- speare as the topic for the first issue of its second half - century and as a ...
... audience , aiming only for an increasingly larger audience for its contributors . Discussing several possible topics , the editorial board selected Shake- speare as the topic for the first issue of its second half - century and as a ...
Página 15
... audience ( if this collection comes their way ) may recognize in its present cheerfully immodest incarnation as " All That Is Known Concerning Shakespeare , " the lineaments , if not always the exact contours , of the lecture I gave at ...
... audience ( if this collection comes their way ) may recognize in its present cheerfully immodest incarnation as " All That Is Known Concerning Shakespeare , " the lineaments , if not always the exact contours , of the lecture I gave at ...
Página 24
... audience was leaving the theater to stroll into the mild London night , I eavesdropped shamelessly on the comments of the spectators . Several said they had not been aware that Shakespeare's last years were so sad . Evidently these ...
... audience was leaving the theater to stroll into the mild London night , I eavesdropped shamelessly on the comments of the spectators . Several said they had not been aware that Shakespeare's last years were so sad . Evidently these ...
Contenido
15 | |
Subtext in Shakespeare | 31 |
Eavesdropping and Stage Groupings in Twelfth Night and Troilus and Cressida | 42 |
The Recovery of the Elizabethan and Jacobean Playhouses | 56 |
Shakespeares Tragic Homeopathy | 77 |
Shakespeares Dramaturgical Foresight in King Lear | 85 |
Macbeth and Its Audience | 91 |
The Critical Reception of Shakespeares Tragedies in TwentiethCentury Germany | 97 |
Remembering Patriarchy in As You Like It | 139 |
Timons Servant Takes a Wife | 150 |
Pucks Headless BearRevisited | 157 |
make ropes in such a scarre | 163 |
The Poetics of Shakespeares Henry VI Trilogy | 186 |
Of Birds and Words in 1 Henry IV | 201 |
A Contemporary Playwright Looks at Shakespeares Plays | 207 |
List of Contributors | 224 |
Hamlet Romantic SelfConsciousness and the Roots of Modern Tragedy | 107 |
The Status of Women in Othello | 124 |
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Términos y frases comunes
action actors All's audience's Bertram Bott Celia central audience century character Cinthio conjecture context Coriolanus Cressida critics crux death Desdemona Diana Diomedes downstage dramatic dramatist Duke Senior e'en Elizabethan stage Elizabethan theater emendation Emilia English essay Falstaff father feel forsake Freud Globe Globe playhouse Gloucester Greek Hamlet headless bear Henry Henry VI Henry's homeopathy Hotspur husband Iago iapes Ibid interpretation John Julius Caesar King Lear king's Lady language literature London lord Lucilius Macbeth Malvolio marriage misread murder option Orlando Othello parallels patriarchy play's playhouse playwright poet Richard Romantics rope's Rosalind says scarre scene sense sexual Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays side audiences speak speare speare's speech Sprigg Stratford subtext suggests surance Susquehanna University Susquehanna University Studies theatrical Thersites thing thou thought Timon of Athens tion Toby toyes tragedy tragic hero Troilus Twelfth Night University Press vowes wife William William Shakespeare woman women words
Pasajes populares
Página 24 - The. latter part of his life was spent, as all men of good sense will wish theirs may be, in ease, retirement, and the conversation of his friends.
Página 20 - Stage-poets have themselves been very bold with, and others very merry at, the memory of Sir John Oldcastle ; whom they have fancied a boon companion, a jovial roister, and yet a coward to boot, contrary to the credit of all chronicles, owning him a martial man of merit. The best is, Sir John Falstaff hath relieved the memory of Sir John Oldcastle, and of late is substituted buffoon in his place ; but it matters as little what petulant poets, as what malicious papists, have written against him.