Tragedy in TransitionSarah Annes Brown, Catherine Silverstone Wiley, 2007. nov. 28. - 315 oldal Tragedy in Transition is an innovative and exciting introduction to the theory and practice of tragedy.
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1 - 3 találat összesen 33 találatból.
124. oldal
... represented . This goes back to Aristotle's Poetics , where hugely influential artistic principles , concerned with the need for decorum in representing reality , are set out . One could polemically call this a Neoclassical work : it ...
... represented . This goes back to Aristotle's Poetics , where hugely influential artistic principles , concerned with the need for decorum in representing reality , are set out . One could polemically call this a Neoclassical work : it ...
134. oldal
... represents a way of living that clashes with Antony and with Egypt . It also represents a point at which Stoic philosophy can offer an ordering principle for the play's morals . 134 RAPHAEL LYNE.
... represents a way of living that clashes with Antony and with Egypt . It also represents a point at which Stoic philosophy can offer an ordering principle for the play's morals . 134 RAPHAEL LYNE.
279. oldal
... representing the unrepresentable , " this formulation seems inadequate , not least because it rests on a paradox : that which is unrepresentable cannot be represented ( unless , of course , it forces a whole- sale reconfiguration of the ...
... representing the unrepresentable , " this formulation seems inadequate , not least because it rests on a paradox : that which is unrepresentable cannot be represented ( unless , of course , it forces a whole- sale reconfiguration of the ...
Tartalomjegyzék
Tragedy in Transition | 1 |
Trojan Suffering Tragic Gods and Transhistorical Metaphysics | 16 |
Hardcore Tragedy | 34 |
Copyright | |
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Aeschylus ancient Antigone Antony argued Aristotle audience Bacchae Blood Meridian Caesar century chapter characters child childhood chorus Christ Christian classical context Creon criticism culture dead death describes Dionysiac Dionysus disgust drama eclipse emotional English essay ethical Euripides example exile experience fate father feral feral child figure Ford Ford's Frankenstein future genre Gloucester gods Greek tragedy Hamlet hero horror human individual Jocasta Jonson King Lear Knight Lacan literary live Macbeth Mary Shelley Medea metaphysical modern Monster moral murder narrative nature Neoclassical Neoclassicism Nietzsche novel Oedipus Tyrannus pain passion performance Philoctetes pity play Poetics political Prometheus protagonist Quarto question Real response ritual role Roman scene science fiction seems Sejanus sense Shakespeare Shelley social Sophocles Soyinka stage Stoppard story sub-tragic suffering theater things Tiberius tradition tragedy's tragic Trojan Women Wilde Wilde's Wilson Knight words writing Zeus Žižek