The TempestSimon and Schuster, 23.08.2011 - 272 Seiten Putting romance onstage, The Tempest gives us a magician, Prospero, a former duke of Milan who was displaced by his treacherous brother, Antonio. Prospero is exiled on an island, where his only companions are his daughter, Miranda, the spirit Ariel, and the monster Caliban. When his enemies are among those caught in a storm near the island, Prospero turns his power upon them through Ariel and other spirits. The characters exceed the roles of villains and heroes. Prospero seems heroic, yet he enslaves Caliban and has an appetite for revenge. Caliban seems to be a monster for attacking Miranda, but appears heroic in resisting Prospero, evoking the period of colonialism during which the play was written. Miranda's engagement to Ferdinand, the Prince of Naples and a member of the shipwrecked party, helps resolve the drama. The authoritative edition of The Tempest from The Folger Shakespeare Library, the trusted and widely used Shakespeare series for students and general readers, is now available as an eBook. Features include: · The exact text of the printed book for easy cross-reference · Hundreds of hypertext links for instant navigation · Freshly edited text based on the best early printed version of the play · Full explanatory notes conveniently placed on pages facing the text of the play · Scene-by-scene plot summaries · A key to famous lines and phrases · An introduction to reading Shakespeare’s language · Illustrations from the Folger Shakespeare Library’s vast holdings of rare books · An essay by a leading Shakespeare scholar providing a modern perspective on the play |
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... back to the text will be indicated by an outlined box. Many of the bracketed words in the stage directions are editorial additions, without textual notes. THE NEW FOLGER LIBRARY SHAKESPEARE Designed to make Shakespeare's great.
... back to the text will be indicated by an outlined box. Many of the bracketed words in the stage directions are editorial additions, without textual notes. THE NEW FOLGER LIBRARY SHAKESPEARE Designed to make Shakespeare's great.
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... directions”; some is suggested within the dialogue itself. Learn to be alert to such signals as you stage the play in your imagination. When, in The Tempest 1.2.28–31, Prospero says to Miranda “Lend thy hand / And pluck my magic ...
... directions”; some is suggested within the dialogue itself. Learn to be alert to such signals as you stage the play in your imagination. When, in The Tempest 1.2.28–31, Prospero says to Miranda “Lend thy hand / And pluck my magic ...
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... directions at what seemed to us the most probable places, but these are ultimately matters that directors and actors—and readers in their imaginations—must decide. Learning to read the language of stage action repays one many times over ...
... directions at what seemed to us the most probable places, but these are ultimately matters that directors and actors—and readers in their imaginations—must decide. Learning to read the language of stage action repays one many times over ...
Seite xl
... , three tombs, and two mossy banks. Stage directions in plays of the time also call for such things as thrones (or “states”), banquets (presumably tables with plaster replicas of Shakespeare's Theater xli food on them), and beds and tombs.
... , three tombs, and two mossy banks. Stage directions in plays of the time also call for such things as thrones (or “states”), banquets (presumably tables with plaster replicas of Shakespeare's Theater xli food on them), and beds and tombs.
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... directions, we mark the change by enclosing it in superior half-brackets (<>). We want our readers to be immediately aware when we have intervened. (Only when we correct an obvious typo- graphical error in the First Folio does the ...
... directions, we mark the change by enclosing it in superior half-brackets (<>). We want our readers to be immediately aware when we have intervened. (Only when we correct an obvious typo- graphical error in the First Folio does the ...
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action actors Alonso ANTONIO appears Ariel audience bear begin BOATSWAIN brave bring brother Caliban called carries Ceres characters charms Daedalus daughter describe directions drink drowned early edition English Enter example exits eyes father Ferdinand Folger Folio follow further give Globe GONZALO hand Harpy hath head hear heart human island keep kind King language Library live London longer note look lord magic master meaning Milan MIRANDA monster Naples nature never past performed perhaps play present Press printed Prospero quartos readers Reading scene SEBASTIAN seems Shakespeare’s Shakespeare’s plays ship sleep sometimes speak speech spirit stage stand STEPHANO story strange tell Tempest ACT theaters thee thing thou thought Trinculo University wind