The New Encyclopædia Britannica: MacropædiaEncyclopædia Britannica, 1993 This encyclopedia includes a two-volume index, a 12-volume Micropaedia (Ready reference), a 17-volume Macropaedia (Knowledge in depth), and the Propaedia. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 13
Seite 161
... Aeschylus is usually regarded as the one who , realizing the dramatic possibilities of the dialogue , first added a second speaker and thus invented the form of tragedy . That so sophisticated a form could have been fully developed by a ...
... Aeschylus is usually regarded as the one who , realizing the dramatic possibilities of the dialogue , first added a second speaker and thus invented the form of tragedy . That so sophisticated a form could have been fully developed by a ...
Seite 162
... Aeschylus ' works . The ac- tion is swifter and more highly articulated ; the dialogue is sharper , more staccato , and bears more of the meaning of the play . Though much has been made of the influence of fate on the action of the play ...
... Aeschylus ' works . The ac- tion is swifter and more highly articulated ; the dialogue is sharper , more staccato , and bears more of the meaning of the play . Though much has been made of the influence of fate on the action of the play ...
Seite 165
... Aeschylus , that evil might be resolved by the enlightenment gained from suffering . As in the tragedies of Euripides , the protagonist's margin of freedom grows ever smaller . " You are the deed's creature , " cries a murderer to his ...
... Aeschylus , that evil might be resolved by the enlightenment gained from suffering . As in the tragedies of Euripides , the protagonist's margin of freedom grows ever smaller . " You are the deed's creature , " cries a murderer to his ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
20th century allegory argument Aristotle audience axioms ballads biography calculus called categorical propositions character children's literature classical comedy comic concepts criticism D.H. Lawrence derived dialects drama early electrons energy England English epic essay example expression fiction formal French function genre German grammar Greek hero human important influence John John Locke language later Latin Leibniz light Lincoln linguistics Lisbon literary logic logician London luminescence Luther mathematics meaning medieval metalogic metre modal modal logic model theory modern moral nanometres narrative nature novel novelists original philosophical phoneme photons plays poem poet poetry popular predicate premises propositions prose prosody relation Renaissance romance rules saga satire semantic sense sentence set theory social story structure style syllogism symbols T.S. Eliot tagmeme theatre theme theorem tion tradition tragedy tragic true truth valid variables verse wave words writing written