Shakespeare and Elizabethan Poetry: A Study of His Earlier Work in Relation to the Poetry of the TimeCUP Archive, 05.07.1979 - 279 Seiten Professor Bradbrook's subject in this study, which was first published by Cambridge in 1979, is no less than the relating of Shakespeare's work to the poetry, criticism and life of his age. Drawing upon a considerable body of evidence, she shows how Shakespeare was influenced by medieval thought, by classical sources, by the popular verse and the theatre of his day, and by the Elizabethan use of language. Professor Bradbrook then proceeds to examine some of his plays in detail; although not writing from the standpoint of any special theory, she includes several interpretations of plays - of All's Well that Ends Well for instance, and of Henry IV - which have proved influential. |
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Inhalt
Medieval and Modern | 1 |
Court Poetry of Elizabeths | 18 |
Elizabethan Poetic and | 35 |
The Ovidian Romance | 51 |
Shakespeare and Elizabethan | 75 |
Character in Shakespeares | 84 |
Titus Andronicus Rape of Lucrece | 104 |
Henry VI Richard III Richard II | 123 |
Sonnets Two Gentle | 141 |
Alls Well Merchant of Venice | 162 |
Henry IV Henry V | 189 |
Loves Labours Lost As You Like | 212 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
appear audience Bassanio Beatrice beauty Ben Jonson Benedick Berowne Bertram Cambridge Chapman chapter characters Claudio clowns colours comedy comic contrast court courtier courtly decorum disguise dramatic Drayton's echoes Elizabethan emblematic embodiment English eyes Falstaff figures fool Hamlet hath Hellen Henry Henry IV Hero and Leander honour Hotspur imagery Jonson kind King lady lament lively Lord loue Love's Labour's Lost lovers Lucrece Marlowe Marlowe's masque medieval mirror mistress mock modern moral Nature Ovidian Romance parody pattern perhaps Petrarchan Phoebe Platonic play poem poet poetry popular Proteus Puttenham Queen Rape of Lucrece relation Revenge rhetorical Richard Richard II Romeo and Juliet Rosalind scene sense Shakespeare Shylock Sidney Silvia soliloquy song sonnets species speech Spenser stage story style symbolic thee theme thou Titus Titus Andronicus tradition tragedy tragic Troilus Twelfth Night Venus and Adonis wooing words writing