The Artistry of Shakespeare's ProseRoutledge, 13/09/2013 - 464 páginas First published in 1968. This re-issues the revised edition of 1979. The Artistry of Shakespeare's Prose is the first detailed study of the use of prose in the plays. It begins by defining the different dramatic and emotional functions which Shakespeare gave to prose and verse, and proceeds to analyse the recurrent stylistic devices used in his prose. The general and particular application of prose is then studied through all the plays, in roughly chronological order. |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 86
Página
... Character of Hamlet Ellis-Fermor Ellis-Fermor Evans Foakes Foakes Fraser Frye Gibson Iconoclastes Griffith That Shakespeherian Rag Hawkes The Living Image Henn Shakespeare, Spenser, Donne Kermode Themes and Variations in Shakespeare's ...
... Character of Hamlet Ellis-Fermor Ellis-Fermor Evans Foakes Foakes Fraser Frye Gibson Iconoclastes Griffith That Shakespeherian Rag Hawkes The Living Image Henn Shakespeare, Spenser, Donne Kermode Themes and Variations in Shakespeare's ...
Página
... characters react to their situation with comparable awareness: if the plot involves total confusion about identity, as does The Comedy of Errors (though not about 'identity' in a modern psychological sense) then it is perfectly natural ...
... characters react to their situation with comparable awareness: if the plot involves total confusion about identity, as does The Comedy of Errors (though not about 'identity' in a modern psychological sense) then it is perfectly natural ...
Página
... characters, dialogue, action and theme', to the language of the plays. Shakespeare's language is an increasingly subtle ... character-creation shown here, and the importance that each has in the play as a whole, may help to justify this ...
... characters, dialogue, action and theme', to the language of the plays. Shakespeare's language is an increasingly subtle ... character-creation shown here, and the importance that each has in the play as a whole, may help to justify this ...
Página
... character to one medium can in some circumstances be broken according to the dramatic mood being stressed. So we have to take two factors into account, the nature of the individual characters, and the tone of the particular context ...
... character to one medium can in some circumstances be broken according to the dramatic mood being stressed. So we have to take two factors into account, the nature of the individual characters, and the tone of the particular context ...
Página
... character with a coarse colloquial prose, and Shakespeare consistently devalues him by contrasting his prose with some nobler character who continues to speak verse and thus dominates the stage: first with Lord Say, whom the mob cruelly ...
... character with a coarse colloquial prose, and Shakespeare consistently devalues him by contrasting his prose with some nobler character who continues to speak verse and thus dominates the stage: first with Lord Say, whom the mob cruelly ...
Índice
From Clown to Character | |
The World of Falstaff | |
Gay Comedy | |
Two Tragic Heroes | |
Serious Comedy | |
Clowns Villians Madmen | |
The Return of Comedy | |
Conclusion | |
Notes | |
Index | |
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Palavras e frases frequentes
abuse action answer appears applied argument attitude becomes begins better character clown comedy comes comic complete continues contrast Coriolanus course created critics death deflating described detail device direct effect Elizabethan equivocation expressed eyes Falstaff feeling figure final follows fool force further give given goes Hamlet hand hath human humour Iago imagery images important ironic King language later lines logic look lord master meaning mock nature never normal once Pandarus parallel Parolles pattern perhaps person piece play plot present produces prose reason repartee repetition rhetorical scene seems seen sense serious Shakespeare shown significant situation soliloquy speak speech stage structure style stylistic suggest symmetries tell thee thing thou Troilus true turn verse whole witty