Shakespearean Criticism, Volumen52Michelle Lee, Kathy D. Darrow Gale Research International, Limited, 2000 - 420 páginas Annotation For a convenient introduction to Shakespearean topics, plays and poems, start with this authoritative resource. Beginning with Volume 27, this illustrated series focuses on criticism published after 1960 and provides the reader with a thematic approach to Shakespeare's works. An introduction, criticism, annotated bibliography and cumulative index to topics help users organize their research, making diligent inquiry quick and easy. The series also offers an annual compilation of essays that represent the year's most noteworthy contributions to Shakespearean scholarship. |
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Página 17
... human beings are capable of murder , and worse . The most unassuming of us harbors the most horrible dreams , and the mechanisms that proliferate Mac- beth's atrocities - even the fear , rage and impotence that slaughter Lady Macduff ...
... human beings are capable of murder , and worse . The most unassuming of us harbors the most horrible dreams , and the mechanisms that proliferate Mac- beth's atrocities - even the fear , rage and impotence that slaughter Lady Macduff ...
Página 94
... human and more - than - human mystery of wedlock's ring : it is a double bond in which doctor or physician is the hidden meaning behind and within that of wife . " By this ring , " says Portia , " the Doctor lay with me . " This paradox ...
... human and more - than - human mystery of wedlock's ring : it is a double bond in which doctor or physician is the hidden meaning behind and within that of wife . " By this ring , " says Portia , " the Doctor lay with me . " This paradox ...
Página 102
... human and divine suf- fering and grief , and supplying in its stead a cancellation of redemptive hopes . Lear's attempts to persuade himself , against his terrible knowledge of the truth , that some faint breath of life remains in his ...
... human and divine suf- fering and grief , and supplying in its stead a cancellation of redemptive hopes . Lear's attempts to persuade himself , against his terrible knowledge of the truth , that some faint breath of life remains in his ...
Contenido
Morality in Shakespeares Works | 1 |
Richard II | 107 |
Richard III | 195 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William ..., Volumen28 Vista de fragmentos - 1984 |
Términos y frases comunes
action Alcibiades Anne Anne's Antony Apemantus appears Arden argues audience authority auxesis bastard becomes body Bolingbroke Buckingham Cambridge character chard Claudius comedy conscience Coriolanus critics crown curse death deformity divine dramatic Duke edition Edward Elizabeth Elizabethan England English essay date evil father figure friends Gaunt gift economy give Hamlet hath Henry Henry VI Henry's Holinshed human Iago illegitimacy John kind King Lear King Richard lines London Lord Macbeth Machiavelli marriage meaning Measure for Measure ment metaphor misanthrope moral plays mother murder nature Othello paradox play's Poet political Prince Prospero Queen Renaissance rhetorical Rich Richmond role royal says scene seems sense sexual Shakespeare shame social soliloquy soul speak speech stage suggest symbol synecdoche Tempest theatrical thee theme things thou throne Timon of Athens tion tragedy tragic Tudor Univ University Press Vice virtue words York