The TempestPenguin UK, 29.10.2015 - 240 Seiten 'The magic in The Tempest is real ... It contains a great many unanswered questions' Margaret Atwood |
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... seems to have fallen on relatively hard times in later life. He would have been brought up as a Catholic, and may have retained Catholic sympathies, but his son subscribed publicly to Anglicanism throughout his life. The most important ...
... seems likely that at some unknown point after the birth of his twins he joined a theatre company and gained experience as both actor and writer in the provinces and London. The London theatres closed because of plague in 1593 and 1594 ...
... one of the Mediterranean's busiest trade routes, and also at Europe's southern boundary, the place where the western world loses its dominance and shades into cultures that seem challenging and alien. Voyaging out of Italy.
... seems so obvious or secure. Of the many strange worlds in Renaissance drama, The Tempest has much the strangest. No ... seem isolated and self-sufficient, an autonomous theatrical laboratory with its own internal logic. It is populated ...
... seems possible on the island, whether it is phantom storms, invisible music, nymphs, harpies, vanishing banquets, flying goddesses, spirit dogs or dancing country-folk. What brings them into being is the technical wizardry of ...