The Cambridge Introduction to Tragedy

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Cambridge University Press, 2007 M05 10 - 243 páginas
Tragedy is the art-form created to confront the most difficult experiences we face: death, loss, injustice, thwarted passion, despair. From ancient Greek theatre up to the most recent plays, playwrights have found, in tragic drama, a means to seek explanation for disaster. But tragedy is also a word we continually encounter in the media, to denote an event which is simply devastating in its emotional power. This introduction explores the relationship between tragic experience and tragic representation. After giving an overview of the tragic theatre canon - including chapters on the Greeks, Shakespeare, Ibsen, Chekhov, post-colonial drama, and Beckett - it also looks at the contribution which philosophers have brought to this subject, before ranging across other art-forms and areas of debate. The book is unique in its chronological range, and brings a wide spectrum of examples, from both literature and life, into the discussion of this emotional and frequently controversial subject.
 

Contenido

Sección 1
4
Sección 2
10
Sección 3
13
Sección 4
21
Sección 5
38
Sección 6
43
Sección 7
63
Sección 8
75
Sección 14
131
Sección 15
145
Sección 16
151
Sección 17
158
Sección 18
160
Sección 19
161
Sección 20
166
Sección 21
167

Sección 9
99
Sección 10
107
Sección 11
117
Sección 12
121
Sección 13
128
Sección 22
168
Sección 23
172
Sección 24
182
Sección 25
189

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Acerca del autor (2007)

Jennifer Wallace is Fellow, lecturer and Director of Studies in English at Peterhouse, University of Cambridge.

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