Shakespearean CriticismMichelle Lee Gale Research International, Limited, 1998 - 420 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 192
... rhetoric's power to mislead and deceive by implying an alternative truth - that of the emotions . Yet despite its pathetic truth , Buckingham's rhetoric joins the other kinds of inadequate and perni- cious speech presented in the early ...
... rhetoric's power to mislead and deceive by implying an alternative truth - that of the emotions . Yet despite its pathetic truth , Buckingham's rhetoric joins the other kinds of inadequate and perni- cious speech presented in the early ...
Seite 206
... rhetoric he will , from time to time , cool the temperature and pro- vide us with a necessary detachment . In King John , this function seems , at first glance , to have been allotted to the Bastard . Yet the nature of his character ...
... rhetoric he will , from time to time , cool the temperature and pro- vide us with a necessary detachment . In King John , this function seems , at first glance , to have been allotted to the Bastard . Yet the nature of his character ...
Seite 207
... rhetoric seriously ) but to the King's more clear- sighted mother , who catches the Bastard out in a rhe- torical flourish , and then shares the joke with him : BAST . Madam , I'll follow you unto the death . ELI . Nay , I would have ...
... rhetoric seriously ) but to the King's more clear- sighted mother , who catches the Bastard out in a rhe- torical flourish , and then shares the joke with him : BAST . Madam , I'll follow you unto the death . ELI . Nay , I would have ...
Inhalt
Henry VIII | 120 |
King John | 203 |
The Two Noble Kinsmen | 289 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Anne appears Arcite's argues Arthur audience authorship Bacon Baconian Bastard Ben Jonson Buckingham character Christopher Marlowe chronicle claim Commodity court Cranmer critics death dramatic Earl edition Elegy Elizabeth Elizabethan Emilia England English essay evidence fact Faulconbridge flatter Fletcher Fletcherian Foakes Folio friendship G. E. Bentley Henry VIII Henry's Hippolyta history play Holinshed honour Hubert images Jacobean Jailer's Daughter John's Jonson Katherine Katherine's King John king's Knight's Tale language lines literary London Lord Marlowe marriage masque ment Midsummer Night's Dream moral Noble Kinsmen Oxford Oxfordians Palamon and Arcite Pandulph Peter Pirithous play's playwright poem poet political Press Prince Queen Renaissance Richard Richard II romance says scene seems sexual Shake Shakespeare's plays Shakspere Sonnets speare speare's speech stage Stratford Stratfordians suggests theatre Theseus Theseus's Thomas thou tion Troublesome Raigne Univ William Shakespeare Winter's Tale Wolsey Wolsey's words writing wrote