The World of Shakespeare's Sonnets: An IntroductionMcFarland, Incorporated, Publishers, 02/01/2008 - 248 páginas Of Shakespeare's sonnets we know the crystalline meter, exquisite diction, and exhilarating surprise of the "turn" in the final couplet. By contrast, we know very little of their subjects and motives. This book does not approach the sonnets as Shakespearean autobiography but instead delineates the customs that shaped the poet's world and thus his sonnets. It argues for understanding them as brilliant, edgy expressions of the equally brilliant, edgy culture of the English Renaissance. |
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Página 90
... female beloved a natural conduit for this higher love . This is the kind of love that Michelangelo pro- fesses to the male beloveds to whom he writes in his sonnets . He calls the most important of these men , the aristocrat Tomasso de ...
... female beloved a natural conduit for this higher love . This is the kind of love that Michelangelo pro- fesses to the male beloveds to whom he writes in his sonnets . He calls the most important of these men , the aristocrat Tomasso de ...
Página 121
... female deceit . The deceit of female beauty , moreover , is nothing less than soul killing . Like the cosmetics and fancy clothing that enhance it , female beauty is deceitful because it involves a blinded love for “ this world's ...
... female deceit . The deceit of female beauty , moreover , is nothing less than soul killing . Like the cosmetics and fancy clothing that enhance it , female beauty is deceitful because it involves a blinded love for “ this world's ...
Página 164
... female . One reader who copied Shakespeare's sonnet 68 ( " Thus is his cheek the map of days outworn " ) from the Poems altered the male pronouns that Benson did not to either neuter ones ( “ thee , " " thy " ) or to a female " she ...
... female . One reader who copied Shakespeare's sonnet 68 ( " Thus is his cheek the map of days outworn " ) from the Poems altered the male pronouns that Benson did not to either neuter ones ( “ thee , " " thy " ) or to a female " she ...
Índice
Mirrors of Courtesy | 21 |
Educating the Courtier | 28 |
Love or Literary Credential? | 34 |
Direitos de autor | |
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aristocratic beauty beloved Benson black mistress sonnets Bray calls celebrated century courtier courtly love criticism culture Dowden Duncan-Jones Earl edition of Shakespeare Elizabethan English Renaissance express eyes fair feelings female Folger gender heterosexual homoeroticism homosexual idea ideal identity language lines literary literature London love poetry lover male friendship Malone Malone's Marotti marriage Massey means metaphor misogynist misogyny narrator nets Othello Oxford patronage Pembroke plays poem poet Portrait praise Ralegh readers refer relationship Renaissance England Rollins romantic same-sex sexual desire Shake Shakespeare in Love Shakespeare writes Shakespeare's day Shakespeare's love Shakespeare's sonnets Sidney similarly slander social sodomy sonnet 18 sonnet 20 sonnet 57 sonnet 63 Southampton Sowerman speare speare's Sonnets Spenser Steevens story suggests sweet Swetnam thee theory Thomas Nashe thou tion University Victorian W.H. Auden Wilde Wilde's William Shakespeare Willie Hewes woman women words written York young man sonnets young man's