Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Band 50Gale Research Company, 1984 |
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Seite 259
... gives us the picture of Rome as a place where words and rituals have dangerously lost their conventional meanings ... give us the world in which Brutus is to undertake his great gesture . When we next see Brutus , his decision is made ...
... gives us the picture of Rome as a place where words and rituals have dangerously lost their conventional meanings ... give us the world in which Brutus is to undertake his great gesture . When we next see Brutus , his decision is made ...
Seite 260
... give us the Caesar of the play - and of the play's critics . Of Caesar's , or for that matter of Brutus's , moral status ... gives ( through his actions ) to the question , who is the play's tragic hero ?, and compare that answer to the ...
... give us the Caesar of the play - and of the play's critics . Of Caesar's , or for that matter of Brutus's , moral status ... gives ( through his actions ) to the question , who is the play's tragic hero ?, and compare that answer to the ...
Seite 346
... gives his characters a self - awareness that immediately differentiates them from those of Fletcher . Just as Palamon and Emilia are shown to appreciate how dearly they have bought their love , so characters like Leontes and Posthumus ...
... gives his characters a self - awareness that immediately differentiates them from those of Fletcher . Just as Palamon and Emilia are shown to appreciate how dearly they have bought their love , so characters like Leontes and Posthumus ...
Inhalt
Social Class in Shakespeares Plays | 1 |
Coriolanus | 99 |
Julius Caesar | 185 |
Urheberrecht | |
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