Shakespeare's Restorations of the FatherRutgers University Press, 1983 - 152 páginas David Sundelson argues that the development of Shakespeare's career and the plays themselves reveal patterns of concern with and conflict over parental authority, fraternal rivalry, homosexuality, and male and female sex roles. In particular, in his readings of the plays, he shows that the loss or weakness of a father -- figures at once attractive and perversely manipulative -- is central to Shakespeare's work. -- from book jacket. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 8
Página 121
... Titus Andronicus , not for any obvious demonstration of Shakespeare's enormous progress as an artist , but because so much psychological material that the later play refines and disguises appears more explicitly in the earlier one ...
... Titus Andronicus , not for any obvious demonstration of Shakespeare's enormous progress as an artist , but because so much psychological material that the later play refines and disguises appears more explicitly in the earlier one ...
Página 122
... Titus's daughter Lavinia , who was to mar- ry Saturninus , is abducted by her lover Bassianus , Titus slays one of his own sons in the ensuing brawl , and Saturninus takes Tamora as his bride instead of Lavinia . “ I am incorporate in ...
... Titus's daughter Lavinia , who was to mar- ry Saturninus , is abducted by her lover Bassianus , Titus slays one of his own sons in the ensuing brawl , and Saturninus takes Tamora as his bride instead of Lavinia . “ I am incorporate in ...
Página 124
... Titus's last remaining son Lucius will be the new em- peror , and he draws a picture of the love between his own son and Titus , the boy's dead grandfather : " Many a time he danc'd thee on his knee , Sung thee asleep , his loving ...
... Titus's last remaining son Lucius will be the new em- peror , and he draws a picture of the love between his own son and Titus , the boy's dead grandfather : " Many a time he danc'd thee on his knee , Sung thee asleep , his loving ...
Contenido
Fathers Sons and Brothers in the Henriad | 27 |
CHAPTER THREE | 53 |
CHAPTER FOUR | 71 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 4 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
Alonso ambivalence Angelo Antonio Ariel audience Aumerle Bassanio becomes Bolingbroke brother Caliban calls child comedies comic command conflict Coppélia Coppélia Kahn daughter dead death Duke Falstaff fantasy father fear Ferdinand finds France Gaunt gives Glendower Hal's Hamlet hath Henriad Henry Henry IV Henry VI Henry's Hotspur I.ii I.iii III.ii infant Isabella King King's kinship Lady Lady Macduff Lavinia lord loss Love's Labour's Lost Lucio Macbeth Macduff magic marriage master Measure for Measure ment Merchant of Venice metaphor Milan Miranda misogyny Mortimer mother mourning murder Nerissa never once Orlando paternal patriarchy peare play play's Portia potency Prince Problem Comedies Prospero Psychoanalytic psychological Queen Representing Shakespeare restoration Richard Richard II rival says scene Schwartz and Kahn Sebastian seems sense sexual Shakes Shakespeare's Development Shylock spider suggests sweet Sycorax Tamora tells Tempest tetralogy thee thou tion Titus tragedies turn V.ii V.iii Vincentio wife wish women York