English Renaissance TragedySpringer, 1988. szept. 29. - 282 oldal This book provides an introductory perspective on its subject together with detailed studies of the major non-Shakespearean tragedies. It assumes that the central and most disturbing insights of the plays were expressed in terms of the thought patterns of the time. |
Részletek a könyvből
1 - 5 találat összesen 48 találatból.
ix. oldal
... unity , order , and identity are intrinsically unstable . Ideas of this kind ( whether entertained as truths or as reasonable working hypotheses ) enabled the tragedians to suggest the universal in the local , the omnitemporal in the ...
... unity , order , and identity are intrinsically unstable . Ideas of this kind ( whether entertained as truths or as reasonable working hypotheses ) enabled the tragedians to suggest the universal in the local , the omnitemporal in the ...
3. oldal
... unity of perspective . In no sense , however , have I attempted to provide a fully coherent schema of Renaissance tragedy ; and I am well aware that the material could have been otherwise divided and presented with substantial ...
... unity of perspective . In no sense , however , have I attempted to provide a fully coherent schema of Renaissance tragedy ; and I am well aware that the material could have been otherwise divided and presented with substantial ...
6. oldal
... unity - and all that it entails in terms of order and intelligibility - may seem no more than the effect of a truce in a war that can have no end . It was perhaps inevitable , therefore , that Renaissance tragedians should exploit the ...
... unity - and all that it entails in terms of order and intelligibility - may seem no more than the effect of a truce in a war that can have no end . It was perhaps inevitable , therefore , that Renaissance tragedians should exploit the ...
7. oldal
... unity - in - contrariety . In tragedies with a martial hero , the Mars - Venus myth , conventionally interpreted as an allegory of nature's concordant discord , provided a singularly appro- priate means for tactfully invoking the ...
... unity - in - contrariety . In tragedies with a martial hero , the Mars - Venus myth , conventionally interpreted as an allegory of nature's concordant discord , provided a singularly appro- priate means for tactfully invoking the ...
8. oldal
... unity out of strife , and an essential pessimism , implying the inevitability of violence and the utter fragility of those bonds which exclude confusion from the objective and subjective worlds . The notion of reality as a process of ...
... unity out of strife , and an essential pessimism , implying the inevitability of violence and the utter fragility of those bonds which exclude confusion from the objective and subjective worlds . The notion of reality as a process of ...
Tartalomjegyzék
The Spanish Tragedy | 55 |
CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE | 82 |
The Revengers Tragedy | 135 |
JOHN WEBSTER | 153 |
THOMAS MIDDLETON | 193 |
Notes | 236 |
Index | 264 |
Más kiadások - Összes megtekintése
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
action Antonio Antonio's Revenge Barabas Beatrice becomes Bianca bonds Bosola Bracciano Bussy D'Ambois Changeling character Christian conception confusion constancy contrariety contrarious critics death decorum deed divine Doctor Faustus drama dramatists Duchess of Malfi Duke echoes Edward effect Elizabethan Tragedy evil fate Faustus's Flamineo Flores Gaveston grace Hamlet harmony hero Hieronimo Hippolito human idea imagery imaginative ironic irony Isabella Jacobean Tragedy Jew of Malta John Webster justice kind King Kyd's Leantio Livia London Lussurioso Macbeth Marlowe Marlowe's marriage means Middleton moral Mortimer murder myth nature noble opposites Othello passion pattern peace play play's plot protagonist relationship Renaissance tragedy revenge Revenger's Tragedy ritual role scene sense Shakespeare significance society Spanish Tragedy speech spirit strife sweet symbolic Tamburlaine theme Thomas Kyd Thomas Middleton thou tragedians tragic unity University Press villain Vindice Vindice's violence Vittoria White Devil Women Beware Women words Zenocrate