Studying Shakespeare: A Guide to the PlaysJohn Wiley & Sons, 15 abr 2008 - 256 páginas This engaging book draws on all of Shakespeare's plays to show they can still be used as a guide to life.
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... court to jest. 4 In his television series Playing Shakespeare, John Barton quotes a scholarly article about 5 The characters are, respectively, Lear; Hal; Petruccio and Iago;. ambiguity, epistemology, and aesthetic problems in Hamlet ...
... court to jest. 4 In his television series Playing Shakespeare, John Barton quotes a scholarly article about 5 The characters are, respectively, Lear; Hal; Petruccio and Iago;. ambiguity, epistemology, and aesthetic problems in Hamlet ...
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... court to jest in, so the discovery of a benevolent Duke in the forest is an opportunity he can't miss out on” (1998: 42). An orthopedic surgeon explained to David Troughton that Richard III's breech birth might have led to a dislocated ...
... court to jest in, so the discovery of a benevolent Duke in the forest is an opportunity he can't miss out on” (1998: 42). An orthopedic surgeon explained to David Troughton that Richard III's breech birth might have led to a dislocated ...
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... court scandal of divorce and remarriage which made the original volume's raison d'être – a verse character of “a wife” – resoundingly topical. Subsequent volumes (regularly enlarged) were entirely in prose and comprised one- to two-page ...
... court scandal of divorce and remarriage which made the original volume's raison d'être – a verse character of “a wife” – resoundingly topical. Subsequent volumes (regularly enlarged) were entirely in prose and comprised one- to two-page ...
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... court, responsibility, and how humans should contribute to the world – the so-called “civic humanism” of Cicero (sometimes called Ciceronian humanism). When books of literary and historical criticism tell us that the Renaissance was the ...
... court, responsibility, and how humans should contribute to the world – the so-called “civic humanism” of Cicero (sometimes called Ciceronian humanism). When books of literary and historical criticism tell us that the Renaissance was the ...
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Índice
1 | |
12 | |
2 Marital Life Shakespeare and Romance | 50 |
3 Political Life Shakespeare and Government | 88 |
4 Public Life Shakespeare and Social Structures | 140 |
5 Real Life Shakespeare and Suffering | 180 |
Works Cited | 223 |
Index | 235 |
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Términos y frases comunes
actor All’s Angelo anger Antipholus Antony and Cleopatra attitude audience Bassanio behavior Bertram brother Brutus Bullingbrook Cassius chapter characters Claudio comedy Coriolanus Coriolanus’s court critics Cymbeline daughter death Diomedes drama Duke early modern Elizabeth Elizabethan emotional England Falstaff father female friends grief Hamlet hath Helena Henry Hermia hero Hotspur human husband Iago identity images Isabella Julius Caesar Katherine Katherine’s King John King Lear language Lear’s Leggatt lover Malvolio marriage marry Merchant of Venice Midsummer Night’s Dream mother mourning murder night Noble Kinsmen Othello Pericles Petruccio play’s plot political Portia Prince Renaissance revenge rhetorical Richard Richard III role Roman Romeo and Juliet Rosalind RSC production says scene servant sexual Shakespeare Shakespeare’s plays Shrew soliloquy speech stage story tells theater theatrical thee thou Timon Titus Andronicus tragedy Troilus and Cressida twins wife Winter’s Tale woman women wooing word