ShakespeareRoutledge, 2013 M10 11 - 208 páginas First published in 1951. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 88
Página 5
George Ian Duthie. Chapter I III [V VI VII CONTENTS Foreword Page 7 Shakespeare's ... Shakespeare and the Order-Disorder Antithesis 39 Comedy 57 Imaginative Interpretation and Troilus and Cressida 89 History II 5 Tragedy 157 The Last Plays ...
George Ian Duthie. Chapter I III [V VI VII CONTENTS Foreword Page 7 Shakespeare's ... Shakespeare and the Order-Disorder Antithesis 39 Comedy 57 Imaginative Interpretation and Troilus and Cressida 89 History II 5 Tragedy 157 The Last Plays ...
Página 7
... Shakespeare's plays, and I have discussed these from certain special points of view. In particular, I have throughout concerned myself a great deal with the matter which forms the subject of Chapter II. Indeed, as far as the bulk of the ...
... Shakespeare's plays, and I have discussed these from certain special points of view. In particular, I have throughout concerned myself a great deal with the matter which forms the subject of Chapter II. Indeed, as far as the bulk of the ...
Página 9
... Shakespeare play expecting this is a mistake. It has been claimed by some that the characters we encounter in Shakespeare, and the situations, are not in all cases such as we should be likely to encounter in real life. One of the best ...
... Shakespeare play expecting this is a mistake. It has been claimed by some that the characters we encounter in Shakespeare, and the situations, are not in all cases such as we should be likely to encounter in real life. One of the best ...
Página 11
... play—at any rate a Shakespeare play—is not necessarily a sequence of events that would be likely to occur in real life: it does not necessarily involve consistent real-life psychology. And much unsound criticism has resulted, Stoll ...
... play—at any rate a Shakespeare play—is not necessarily a sequence of events that would be likely to occur in real life: it does not necessarily involve consistent real-life psychology. And much unsound criticism has resulted, Stoll ...
Página 12
... Shakespeare criticism,” says Stoll, again, “is that it has been prompted and guided by the spirit of literalism. The play has been thought to be a psychological document, not primarily a play, a structure, both interdependent and ...
... Shakespeare criticism,” says Stoll, again, “is that it has been prompted and guided by the spirit of literalism. The play has been thought to be a psychological document, not primarily a play, a structure, both interdependent and ...
Contenido
7 | |
9 | |
Chapter II Shakespeare and the OrderDisorder Antithesis | 39 |
Chapter III Comedy | 57 |
Chapter IV Imaginative Interpretation and Troilus and Cressida | 89 |
Chapter V History | 115 |
Chapter VI Tragedy | 157 |
Chapter VII The Last Plays | 188 |
Book List | 201 |
Index | 205 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
according Achilles antithesis audience Aufidius Belarius believe Bolingbroke character Claudius comedy concerned conflict Coriolanus court Cressida criticism Cymbeline deed deposed Desdemona disorder-figures disordered personality doth Dover Wilson dramatic Duke Elizabethan evil fact Falstaff father feel fight figure final find first forest of Arden foul gives God’s Greek Guiderius Hamlet hath Hector Henry Henry IV plays Henry’s hero honour Hotspur Iago idea imaginative influence interpretation king King Lear L. C. Knights Lady Macbeth law of order Lear lover Machiavelli Malvolio man’s means mind moral murder nature Olivia Othello passion poetic Posthumus Prince Professor Dover Professor Stoll psychological reader reason regards Richard Richard II Rome satire says scene Shake Shakespeare play Shakespeare wants Shakespearian significance Sir Toby speaks subconscious suggested Tamburlaine theme things thou tragedy Troilus Troilus and Cressida true Twelfth Night universe unnatural usurpation wife Wilson Knight Witches words wrong