Twentieth Century Interpretations of Doctor Faustus: A Collection of Critical Essays, Band 10Willard Farnham Prentice-Hall, 1969 - 120 Seiten "Each volume of TWENTITH CENTURY INTERPREATIONS presents the best of modern commentary on a great work of literature, and an original introduction to that work by an outstanding authority. Analyzing themes, style, genre, structural elements, artistic influences, and historical background, the essays define the place of the work in its tradition and make clear its significance for readers of today." -Publisher. |
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Seite 21
... feeling which is poetically given in the soliloquy . The good and bad angels enter from opposite sides : heaven and the saints are disclosed to music : hell is revealed and described by the bad angel . It " exploits , " as Dr Boas says ...
... feeling which is poetically given in the soliloquy . The good and bad angels enter from opposite sides : heaven and the saints are disclosed to music : hell is revealed and described by the bad angel . It " exploits , " as Dr Boas says ...
Seite 94
... feels an autobiographical touch , feels it keenly too . " Miss Josephine Preston Peabody , quoted by Bakeless , had no doubt about it . She makes the Marlowe of her play cry : " I am the man , the devil and the soul . " Others imply it ...
... feels an autobiographical touch , feels it keenly too . " Miss Josephine Preston Peabody , quoted by Bakeless , had no doubt about it . She makes the Marlowe of her play cry : " I am the man , the devil and the soul . " Others imply it ...
Seite 99
... feeling that Faustus's panic fear of hell is not only the inevitable result of a wilful , self - centred denial of life . It is as though Marlowe himself felt guilt about any of his assertive drives ( understandably enough , since they ...
... feeling that Faustus's panic fear of hell is not only the inevitable result of a wilful , self - centred denial of life . It is as though Marlowe himself felt guilt about any of his assertive drives ( understandably enough , since they ...
Inhalt
Introduction by Willard Farnham | 1 |
Marlowes Faustus by M C Bradbrook | 17 |
Faustus as Allegory by James Smith | 23 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accept action Angel appears asks beauty become beginning blood brings calls Cambridge character choice Christ Christian comes conjuring course critics damnation damned death desire despair devil Divinity Doctor Faustus drama edition Elizabethan English English Studies eternal evil experience fact faith fall Faustus's fear feeling final followed give hand heaven Helen hell hero hope human imagination irony John kind knowledge later less limitation lines live London Lucifer magic Marlowe Marlowe's means Mephostophilis merely mind moral nature never offers once permission play pleasure possible present Press pride published reason Renaissance repent representative Reprinted says scene scholars seems sense Shakespeare's shows sins soliloquy soul speech spirit stage suffering suggests Sweet symbolic Tamburlaine tells thee things thou thought traditional tragedy tragic true turn University
Verweise auf dieses Buch
Christopher Marlowe, an Annotated Bibliography of Criticism Since 1950 Kenneth Friedenreich Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1979 |
From Manual Workers to Wage Laborers: Transformation of the Social Question Robert Castel Keine Leseprobe verfügbar |