Poetry and Religion as DramaWorld Press, 1965 - 211 Seiten |
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Seite 32
... tragic trilogy , closing on a note of burlesque , was the sur- viving link with some ritual dance . The " ithyphallic " figures in a vase - painting of 400 B.C. ( in a plate in A. W. Pickard - Cambridge's Dithyramb , Tragedy and Comedy ) ...
... tragic trilogy , closing on a note of burlesque , was the sur- viving link with some ritual dance . The " ithyphallic " figures in a vase - painting of 400 B.C. ( in a plate in A. W. Pickard - Cambridge's Dithyramb , Tragedy and Comedy ) ...
Seite 97
... tragic . ” 16 But the first title in her list of religious plays ( which " cannot be tragic " ) is the Oresteia of Aeschylus . Aristotle himself has referred more than once to the Oresteian plays as tragedies . He has also remarked ...
... tragic . ” 16 But the first title in her list of religious plays ( which " cannot be tragic " ) is the Oresteia of Aeschylus . Aristotle himself has referred more than once to the Oresteian plays as tragedies . He has also remarked ...
Seite 98
... tragic experience that raises pity and fear , and the tragic purgation or tempering is stimulated by the religious experience . It is difficult to agree with Ellis - Fermor when she says that by justifying the ways of God to men Milton ...
... tragic experience that raises pity and fear , and the tragic purgation or tempering is stimulated by the religious experience . It is difficult to agree with Ellis - Fermor when she says that by justifying the ways of God to men Milton ...
Inhalt
PREFACE | 1 |
RELIGION AND DRAMA | 23 |
EVERYMAN AND DR FAUSTUS | 62 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action actors appears Aristotle Ascent of F6 audience Becket becomes blank verse Cathedral characters choric chorus Christ Christian Christopher Fry Church comedy comes conflict dance death device devil Dionysus divine Dr Faustus dramatist E. K. Chambers element Ellis-Fermor emotion Epilogue Everyman evil experience faith fourth tempter Fry's Greek tragedy heaven human Ibid images imitation important irony Jesus pattern kind knights Lord Marlowe martyr martyrdom mask means medieval drama Mephistophilis Middle Ages Milton mind modern Morality Murder mystery myth nature Nicoll Paracelsus passage plane poetic drama poetry and drama preface present pride priests problem prose drama relation religion religious drama religious play Renaissance resurrection rites ritual sacrifice Saint Joan Samson Agonistes scene seeks sense sermon Shakespeare Shaw significance soul speech spirit stage suffering T. S. Eliot Tamburlaine temptation episode theatre things thou thought tion tragic W. B. Yeats writes Yahweh