Shakespeare, Jonson, Molière: The Comic ContractMacmillan, 1980 - 246 Seiten |
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Seite 97
... doubt , many modern readers would sympathise with this ideal , in so far at least as its alternative was immediate marriage to a stranger enforced by a father as crudely authoritarian as Gorgibus . Could Molière really have intended us ...
... doubt , many modern readers would sympathise with this ideal , in so far at least as its alternative was immediate marriage to a stranger enforced by a father as crudely authoritarian as Gorgibus . Could Molière really have intended us ...
Seite 125
... doubt right to alert us to the verisimilitude of the background of metropolitan life . 17 Instead Jonson invites us to join in for one day in a world in which women band together in monstrous regiment over their husbands , in which men ...
... doubt right to alert us to the verisimilitude of the background of metropolitan life . 17 Instead Jonson invites us to join in for one day in a world in which women band together in monstrous regiment over their husbands , in which men ...
Seite 137
... doubt grotesque degenerates , but they are also , or were certainly intended to be , entertaining . It is not so much that we have to be reminded that a Jacobean audience would have found them funny ; the 1977 National Theatre ...
... doubt grotesque degenerates , but they are also , or were certainly intended to be , entertaining . It is not so much that we have to be reminded that a Jacobean audience would have found them funny ; the 1977 National Theatre ...
Inhalt
The Triumph of Nature | 19 |
Comic Controllers | 43 |
Quacks and Conmen | 69 |
Urheberrecht | |
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absurd action Agnès Alceste Alchemist appear argues argument Arnolphe attempt attitude audience authority Bartholomew Fair become believe century chapter characters comedy comic contrast course court critics doctors Dom Juan doubt Duke earlier effect Elizabethan Epicoene example expect fact Fair father feel Femmes figure final force give given human idea ideal ironic irony Jonson Juan justice King ladies language laugh less London look lovers marriage master means Measure Measure for Measure Médecin Molière Molière's moral nature never Night's normal pattern play position Précieuses Prospero reason representative ridiculous role satire scene seems seen sense sexual Shakespeare social society sort speech stage suggests surely Tartuffe theatre Theseus things tradition Troilus and Cressida turn Volpone whole