Shakespearean CriticismMichele Lee Gale Research International, Limited, 1998 - 412 Seiten Presents literary criticism on the plays and poetry of Shakespeare. Critical essays are selected from leading sources, including journals, magazines, books, reviews, diaries, newspapers, pamphlets, and scholarly papers. Includes commentary by Shakespeare's contemporaries as well as a full range of views from later centuries, with an emphasis on contemporary analysis. Includes aesthetic criticism, textual criticism, and criticism of Shakespeare in performance. |
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Seite 116
... stanza of the poem will call " the treasure of his happy state " -as a primal shining moment in the past to which the poem's present - tense narrative now remembers back as absolute beginning of the diegetic story . At the same time ...
... stanza of the poem will call " the treasure of his happy state " -as a primal shining moment in the past to which the poem's present - tense narrative now remembers back as absolute beginning of the diegetic story . At the same time ...
Seite 117
... stanza , the poem makes a point of mentioning its use of " chaste " in the last line of the first , but this remarking or citation of its own lan- guage , when the poem for the first time recalls its own speaking , is how the poem ...
... stanza , the poem makes a point of mentioning its use of " chaste " in the last line of the first , but this remarking or citation of its own lan- guage , when the poem for the first time recalls its own speaking , is how the poem ...
Seite 131
... stanza's elegiac ret- rospection . But the stanza also carefully repeats the terms with which , at its beginning , in the second stanza , the poem accounts for the loss of Collatine's ideal vision , " the clear unmatched red and white ...
... stanza's elegiac ret- rospection . But the stanza also carefully repeats the terms with which , at its beginning , in the second stanza , the poem accounts for the loss of Collatine's ideal vision , " the clear unmatched red and white ...
Inhalt
Violence in Shakespeares Works | 1 |
The Rape of Lucrece | 77 |
Titus Andronicus | 169 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Aaron abuse Achilles action argues aristocratic Bassianus beauty becomes blood body character chaste chastity Chaucer chiastic Collatine Collatine's Coppélia crime critics cultural death Desdemona domestic violence doth dramatic early modern Elizabethan England English essay example eyes father female figure Hamlet hand hath Henry honor husband infanticide Kate kill king language Lavinia lence literary London Lucius Lucrece's Lucretia male Marcus means moral Murdering Mothers narrative narrator Othello Ovid painting Pandarus Petruchio's Philomela play play's poem poem's political praise Rape of Lucrece rapist reader reading Renaissance representations revenge rhetorical Roman Rome Saturninus scene sexual Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's Lucrece shame Shrew signifier social sonnets speare speare's speech stanza Stockholm syndrome story suicide symbolic Taming Tamora Tarquin thee thou tion Titus Andronicus Titus's tragedy trans Troilus and Cressida Troy Ulysses University Press Venus and Adonis victim wife Winter's Tale woman women words writing Yorkshire Tragedy