Shakespearean CriticismMichelle Lee Gale Research International, Limited, 1998 - 420 Seiten Presents literary criticism on the plays and poetry of Shakespeare. Critical essays are selected from leading sources, including journals, magazines, books, reviews, diaries, newspapers, pamphlets, and scholarly papers. Includes commentary by Shakespeare's contemporaries as well as a full range of views from later centuries, with an emphasis on contemporary analysis. Includes aesthetic criticism, textual criticism, and criticism of Shakespeare in performance. |
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Seite 105
... becomes a case in point of the corruption that undermines the honorable man who too easily slides into “ loose mimic [ ry ] " of a besetting wickedness . Now this jeopardy of insidiously turning into one's enemy is the kinsmen's topic ...
... becomes a case in point of the corruption that undermines the honorable man who too easily slides into “ loose mimic [ ry ] " of a besetting wickedness . Now this jeopardy of insidiously turning into one's enemy is the kinsmen's topic ...
Seite 125
... becomes increasingly resentful and self - pitying . At the same time , the very language through which she expresses these feelings has religious overtones which are extremely revealing . Consider , for example , her description of her ...
... becomes increasingly resentful and self - pitying . At the same time , the very language through which she expresses these feelings has religious overtones which are extremely revealing . Consider , for example , her description of her ...
Seite 206
... become grandiloquent or fulsome . ” 2 In the final scenes , he " becomes increasingly repeti- tive , almost nagging . His invention runs dry , " because , " like all cynics and parodists , he feeds parasitically upon the very thing he ...
... become grandiloquent or fulsome . ” 2 In the final scenes , he " becomes increasingly repeti- tive , almost nagging . His invention runs dry , " because , " like all cynics and parodists , he feeds parasitically upon the very thing he ...
Inhalt
Henry VIII | 120 |
King John | 203 |
The Two Noble Kinsmen | 289 |
Urheberrecht | |
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