Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Band 61Gale Research Company, 1984 |
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Seite 77
... social order is determined by a natural spatial order . This rhetoric resonates with its associated ritual and pastoral ethos , and promises a new social foundation in which rivalries are ultimately neutralized . I will argue that every ...
... social order is determined by a natural spatial order . This rhetoric resonates with its associated ritual and pastoral ethos , and promises a new social foundation in which rivalries are ultimately neutralized . I will argue that every ...
Seite 188
... social position , especially when . . . all members of the society are involved in a ceaseless struggle for status and prestige . . . Without confirmation of one's prestige through behavior , this prestige is nothing . The immense value ...
... social position , especially when . . . all members of the society are involved in a ceaseless struggle for status and prestige . . . Without confirmation of one's prestige through behavior , this prestige is nothing . The immense value ...
Seite 192
... social inferior whose elevated status is monstrous and more the product of a " Taylor " than of " nature " ( II.ii. 1066 ) . Depicting both good and bad dukes , earls , and gentlemen , the play preserves the master - servant ...
... social inferior whose elevated status is monstrous and more the product of a " Taylor " than of " nature " ( II.ii. 1066 ) . Depicting both good and bad dukes , earls , and gentlemen , the play preserves the master - servant ...
Inhalt
Masculine Identity and Feminine Power | 119 |
Religion History and Politics | 136 |
Further Reading | 158 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action alchemy Anne Antonio argues Ariel audience Belarius Britain Caliban Cambridge character Chronicles claim Cloten comedy conscience Cordelia court Cranmer creature critics Cymbeline Cymbeline's daughter death dramatic Edgar Edmund Elizabeth emblem England English essay father Fool Gloucester Goneril Goneril and Regan Guiderius Henry VIII Henry's Holinshed human Iachimo ideal Il pastor fido Imogen interpretation Jacobean James John Katherine Katherine's Kent King Lear king's kingdom Lear's London Lord love test magic marriage masque meaning ment Miranda moral narrative nature Orpheus patrilineal play play's plot political Posthumus Prince Prospero Queen reading Renaissance response role romance scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare social speak speare speare's speech spirit stage Stephen Orgel suggests symbolic Tempest theater theatrical thee thou tion tragedy tragicomedy trial true truth Univ University Press virtue vision William Shakespeare Winter's Tale Wolsey Wolsey's words York