The Insufficiency of Virtue: Macbeth and the Natural OrderRowman & Littlefield, 1996 - 229 Seiten The first scene-by-scene philosophical study of any Shakespeare play, this book demonstrates why Shakespeare's poetic writings still arouse and sustain serious inquiry and reflection. Using a combination of philosophical rigor, political insight, and textual thoroughness, Jan H. Blits delineates the competing forms of virtue within Macbeth--the courageous public virtue of warriors like Macbeth and the internal Christian virtue evoked by Duncan. This new interpretation of Macbeth explains crucial paradoxes overlooked by previous scholars and will serve as a model for future scholarship in the field. |
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Seite 31
... one's moral quality is no longer one's fellow citizens , but God and one's own conscience . With the shift of emphasis from visible deeds to invisible intentions , conscience ( literally , " knowing with one- self " ) becomes central in ...
... one's moral quality is no longer one's fellow citizens , but God and one's own conscience . With the shift of emphasis from visible deeds to invisible intentions , conscience ( literally , " knowing with one- self " ) becomes central in ...
Seite 64
... one's hands is proof of one's guilt . Macbeth's manipulation seems to have worked . Spurred by his wife , he says that he is firmly resolved : I am settled , and bend up Each corporeal agent to this terrible feat . ( 1.7.80-81 ) And ...
... one's hands is proof of one's guilt . Macbeth's manipulation seems to have worked . Spurred by his wife , he says that he is firmly resolved : I am settled , and bend up Each corporeal agent to this terrible feat . ( 1.7.80-81 ) And ...
Seite 149
... one's offspring ( " Father'd he is , and yet he's fatherless " [ 4.2.27 ] ) , 29 so being a mother , Lady Macduff seemed to think , means to protect , as well as to give birth to , one's children . It is not clear , however , how Lady ...
... one's offspring ( " Father'd he is , and yet he's fatherless " [ 4.2.27 ] ) , 29 so being a mother , Lady Macduff seemed to think , means to protect , as well as to give birth to , one's children . It is not clear , however , how Lady ...
Inhalt
Act Two | 67 |
Act Three | 95 |
Act Four | 133 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action answer appears Banquo battle become king beth beth's Birnam Wood blood castle Cawdor chance Christian conscience contrast crime crown dare dead death deed Despite Donalbain Duncan's murder Duncan's room Dunsinane elective monarchy England scene equivocation everything evil explicitly fate father fear fight final Fleance Ghost God's Gorgon guilt hand hath hear heart Heaven Hecate Hist Holinshed honor human husband innocence instruments of Darkness kill Duncan killers kingship Lady Mac Lady Macbeth Lady Macduff Lenox Lord Macbeth says Macbeth seems Macbeth speaks Macbeth thinks Malcolm manly virtue means mentions moral murdering Duncan Mystery Play natural order never night nobles once one's play political pray prophecy refers Rosse Rosse's royal Scot Scotland Scottish sense Seyton Shakespeare Shakespearean Tragedy Siward sleep soliloquy soul speech suggests sword tell Thane Thane of Cawdor thee things thou thought throne tion trust unsex wife Witches woman words
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Perspectives on Politics in Shakespeare John Albert Murley,Sean D. Sutton Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2006 |