Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, 50. kötetGale Research Company, 1984 |
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1 - 3 találat összesen 87 találatból.
135. oldal
... claim to " honour [ his ] own truth " is punctured as the play demonstrates the negoti- ated terms of any human truth . The sliding signification of the hero's wounds vividly documents this fact : ini- tially the signs of heroism and ...
... claim to " honour [ his ] own truth " is punctured as the play demonstrates the negoti- ated terms of any human truth . The sliding signification of the hero's wounds vividly documents this fact : ini- tially the signs of heroism and ...
195. oldal
... claim a few correct de- cisions here and there . It takes a Brutus to avoid the statistical chances of occasional success that man- kind is prone to . From the initial decision to join the conspiracy , to his conduct at Philippi , the ...
... claim a few correct de- cisions here and there . It takes a Brutus to avoid the statistical chances of occasional success that man- kind is prone to . From the initial decision to join the conspiracy , to his conduct at Philippi , the ...
298. oldal
... claim to Emilia and the correlation of wealth and worth that claim supports . If Arcite credits his success to fortune and virtù , Palamon parades his poverty as the mark of moral scrupulosity . So poor that he is not even the " owner ...
... claim to Emilia and the correlation of wealth and worth that claim supports . If Arcite credits his success to fortune and virtù , Palamon parades his poverty as the mark of moral scrupulosity . So poor that he is not even the " owner ...
Tartalomjegyzék
Social Class in Shakespeares Plays | 1 |
Coriolanus | 99 |
Julius Caesar | 185 |
Copyright | |
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action actor Antony Antony's Arcite's argued aristocratic assassination audience Aufidius blood body Brutus Brutus's Cade Cambridge Casca Caska Cassius character Chaucer Cicero comedy comic common conspirators Corio Coriolanus Coriolanus's court critics culture Cynic Daugh death Decius drama early modern Elizabethan Emilia emulation England English Epicurean essay fear Fletcher Greville Henry hero heroic honor interpretation Jailer's Daughter James Julius Caesar King King Lear Knight's Tale language lanus Lear London lord Martius means Menenius ment Midsummer Night's Dream moral Noble Kinsmen Oxford Palamon Palamon and Arcite patricians Pirithous play's plebeians plot Plutarch political poor popular Queen Renaissance rhetoric ritual Rome says scene seems senate sense sexual Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays social speak speare speare's speech stage Stoic suggests theater theatrical Theseus Theseus's things thou tion Titus Andronicus traditional tragedy tragic tribunes Tudor voice Wooer words wounds