Shakespeare, Jonson, Molière: The Comic ContractMacmillan, 1980 - 246 Seiten |
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Seite 52
... pattern of reversal is analogous to that which we considered in the previous chapter in As You Like It and L'Ecole des Femmes . There we began with an apparent opposition between nature and the tyranny of social law and convention . But ...
... pattern of reversal is analogous to that which we considered in the previous chapter in As You Like It and L'Ecole des Femmes . There we began with an apparent opposition between nature and the tyranny of social law and convention . But ...
Seite 104
... pattern for the war of courtship which is to continue through the play - a pattern of alarums and excursions , sorties and retreats . Boyet comes back from his preliminary parley with an amused account of Navarre's celibate court ...
... pattern for the war of courtship which is to continue through the play - a pattern of alarums and excursions , sorties and retreats . Boyet comes back from his preliminary parley with an amused account of Navarre's celibate court ...
Seite 186
... pattern . Described in outline they can easily be assimilated to this model , but the actual experience of either play by readers or audiences tends to show that they are much more ambiguous and less clearly comic than the outline pattern ...
... pattern . Described in outline they can easily be assimilated to this model , but the actual experience of either play by readers or audiences tends to show that they are much more ambiguous and less clearly comic than the outline pattern ...
Inhalt
The Triumph of Nature | 19 |
Comic Controllers | 43 |
Quacks and Conmen | 69 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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