Roman DramaThomas Alan Dorey, Donald Reynolds Dudley Basic Books, 1965 - 229 Seiten |
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Seite 125
... human into the human . How he achieves this with certain Senecan elements , making tractable much that is dramatically and theatrically intractable is the subject of this study . Seneca's most compelling appeal for the Elizabethan ...
... human into the human . How he achieves this with certain Senecan elements , making tractable much that is dramatically and theatrically intractable is the subject of this study . Seneca's most compelling appeal for the Elizabethan ...
Seite 157
... human being . In Hamlet there is a very strong sense ( stronger than in Richard III ) that not only is the relationship of a man to something outside himself being explored , but that the man himself is being explored . If Richard is ...
... human being . In Hamlet there is a very strong sense ( stronger than in Richard III ) that not only is the relationship of a man to something outside himself being explored , but that the man himself is being explored . If Richard is ...
Seite 167
... human nature , which consists in a transgression of natural laws . Any hero , at some time or other , utters Rodogune's ' Sors de mon coeur , Nature ' . In the delicate determination of the limits of amoralism and immoralism lies the ...
... human nature , which consists in a transgression of natural laws . Any hero , at some time or other , utters Rodogune's ' Sors de mon coeur , Nature ' . In the delicate determination of the limits of amoralism and immoralism lies the ...
Inhalt
Plautus and his Audience | 21 |
The Glorious Military | 51 |
The Amphitryo Theme | 87 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action actors Alcmena Alcmène Alkmene allusion Amphitruo Amphitryon appears Aristophanes atque audience Bessus boast braggart century character chiton Chremes Cleomachus Comedy comic contemporary Corneille Corneille's Créon criticism Curculio Demea Demipho Dircé doth dramatic dramatist Dryden Dyskolos Elizabethan fabula fact father Fraenkel give Gorgias Greek originals Hamlet Heauton Timorumenos Hegio Hercules hero horror humour husband Ibid Jason Jupiter Jupiter's Kleist Knemon Latin Play lines lover mask Medea Médée Menander Menander's Menedemus Mercury mihi miles gloriosus military Molière Molière's Mostellaria nunc Oedipe Palaestrio passages performed perhaps Phormio Plautine Plautus Plautus and Terence Plautus's playwright plot probably prologue Pyrgopolinices quae quam quid references revenge Richard Richard III Roman Rome scene Seneca Seneca's play Shakespeare slave soldier soliloquy Sosia Sosie Sostratos speech stage suggests tells theatre theme Theoropides Thésée thou Thyestes tibi Titus tragedy tragic translation Tyboe Westminster words writing young