The Masks of HamletUniversity of Delaware Press, 1992 - 971 oldal In this work, Rosenberg insists again and again that only the individual reader or actor can determine Shakespeare's design of Hamlet's character -- and of the play. To interpret Hamlet's words and actions at the many crises, the reader needs to double in the role of actor, imagining the character from the inside and observing from the outside. Winner of the Theatre Library Association Award for 1993. |
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1 - 5 találat összesen 78 találatból.
ix. oldal
... friends , enemies , ourselves ? On Shakespeare's way to exploring this in Hamlet , he set himself a Herculean task : cram as much as possible of the clashing multiplicity of human personality - imagi- native , sensual , spiritual ...
... friends , enemies , ourselves ? On Shakespeare's way to exploring this in Hamlet , he set himself a Herculean task : cram as much as possible of the clashing multiplicity of human personality - imagi- native , sensual , spiritual ...
xv. oldal
... friends and colleagues supplemented , with personal reports and clippings , the details of Hamlet stage ex- perience that my wife Mary and I collected from attending many Hamlet perfor- mances of the last half century , and from our ...
... friends and colleagues supplemented , with personal reports and clippings , the details of Hamlet stage ex- perience that my wife Mary and I collected from attending many Hamlet perfor- mances of the last half century , and from our ...
xix. oldal
... friends , and strangers who became friends , from all over the world . They have wonderfully enriched my study though they cannot be held responsible for any inaccuracies or follies that have crept in : those are mine alone . This is ...
... friends , and strangers who became friends , from all over the world . They have wonderfully enriched my study though they cannot be held responsible for any inaccuracies or follies that have crept in : those are mine alone . This is ...
6. oldal
... Friends to this ground ! Mar- cellus prevents intervention with : And liegemen to the Dane ! We know where we are . Unless we had heard the play's title announced , or read it on a bill , or seen a flag recognizably Danish , this ...
... Friends to this ground ! Mar- cellus prevents intervention with : And liegemen to the Dane ! We know where we are . Unless we had heard the play's title announced , or read it on a bill , or seen a flag recognizably Danish , this ...
7. oldal
... friends , As you are friends , scholars , and soldiers ... Hamlet will be distraught then . Marcellus is certainly not a friend as Horatio is ; the designation scholar may be courtesy , even a touch of antic . Marcellus has no ...
... friends , As you are friends , scholars , and soldiers ... Hamlet will be distraught then . Marcellus is certainly not a friend as Horatio is ; the designation scholar may be courtesy , even a touch of antic . Marcellus has no ...
Tartalomjegyzék
ix | |
xvii | |
1 | |
12 | |
18 | |
25 | |
Act I Scene ii Part 1 | 36 |
Generalization Ahead | 45 |
Act III Scene i Part 2 | 463 |
Act III Scene i Part 3 | 473 |
Act III Scene i Part 4 | 484 |
Act III Scene i Part 5 | 497 |
Act III Scene i Part 6 | 508 |
Act III Scene ii Part 1 | 548 |
Act III Scene ii Part 2 | 553 |
Act III Scene ii Part 3 | 560 |
Claudius | 47 |
Gertrude | 70 |
Act I Scene ii Part 2 | 82 |
Hamlet Part 1 | 92 |
Hamlet Part 2 | 118 |
Hamlet Part 3 | 155 |
Hamlet Part 4 | 167 |
Act I Scene ii Part 3 | 186 |
Act I Scene ii Part 4 | 204 |
Act I Scene ii Part 5 | 221 |
Ophelia | 236 |
Laertes | 253 |
Polonius | 257 |
Act I Scene iii | 265 |
Act I Scene iv | 281 |
Act I Scene v Part 1 | 310 |
Act I Scene v Part 2 | 328 |
Act I Scene v Part 3 | 340 |
Act II Scene i | 357 |
Act II Scene ii Part 1 | 368 |
Act II Scene ii Part 2 | 375 |
Act II Scene ii Part 3 | 386 |
Act II Scene ii Part 4 | 403 |
Act II Scene ii Part 5 | 415 |
Act II Scene ii Part 6 | 438 |
Act III Scene i Part 1 | 455 |
Act III Scene ii Part 4 | 572 |
Act III Scene ii Part 5 | 577 |
Act III Scene ii Part 6 | 594 |
Act III Scene iii | 622 |
Act III Scene iv Part 1 | 641 |
Act III Scene iv Part 2 | 673 |
Act III Scene iv Part 3 | 686 |
Act IV Scene i | 722 |
Act IV Scene ii | 729 |
Act IV Scene iii | 732 |
Act IV Scene iv | 745 |
Act IV Scene v Part 1 | 757 |
Act IV Scene v Part 2 | 776 |
Act IV Scene v Part 3 | 789 |
Act IV Scene v Part 4 | 797 |
Act IV Scene vi | 810 |
Act IV Scene vii | 812 |
Act V Scene i Part 1 | 825 |
Act V Scene i Part 2 | 845 |
Act V Scene ii Part 1 | 859 |
Act V Scene ii Part 2 | 875 |
Act V Scene ii Part 3 | 905 |
Act V Scene ii Part 4 | 911 |
Bibliography | 927 |
Index | 955 |
Más kiadások - Összes megtekintése
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
action actor actor-reader Alan Howard antic arms arras asks audience begins Booth Burton character Charles Kean Claudius court courtiers dangerous death Denmark Dover Wilson emotional eyes face father fear Fechter feel felt fierce Fortinbras Frances Barber G. B. Shaw Gertrude Gertrude's gesture Ghost Gielgud grief Hamlet plays hand head Horatio impulse Irving Jacobi Kachalov Kainz Kean Kemble kill kind King King's kiss Laertes later laugh lonius look Marcellus mask McKellen's mind mother Mousetrap moved murder mystery observed Olivier Ophelia passion pause perhaps physical play Player Polonius polyphony power Hamlet Prince Queen revenge role Rosencrantz and Guildenstern scene seems seen sense sexual Shakespeare shock soliloquy sometimes soul sound speak speech spies spoke stage subtext suddenly suggests sweet Hamlet sword tears tenderness theatre thought tone touch tried trying turned usually violence voice whisper Wittenberg words young
Népszerű szakaszok
33. oldal - And then it started, like a guilty thing Upon a fearful summons. I have heard The cock, that is the trumpet to the morn, Doth with his lofty and shrill-sounding throat Awake the god of day; and at his warning. Whether in sea or fire, in earth or air, The extravagant and erring spirit hies To his confine; and of the truth herein This present object made probation.
12. oldal - Whose blood and judgment are so well commingled That they are not a pipe for fortune's finger To sound what stop she please. Give me that man That is not passion's slave, and I will wear him In my heart's core, ay, in my heart of heart, As I do thee.