What Happens in HamletCambridge University Press, 1959 - 357 páginas John Dover Wilson's What Happens in Hamlet is a classic of Shakespeare criticism. First published in 1935, it is still being read throughout the English-speaking world and has been widely translated. Hamlet has excited more curiosity and aroused more debate than any other play ever written. Is Hamlet really mad? Does he really see his father's ghost, or is it an illusion? Is the ghost good or bad? What does it all mean? Dover Wilson brings out the significance of each part of the complex action, against the background. His analysis of the play emphasises Shakespeare's dramatic art and shows how the play must be seen and heard to be understood. This is a readable, entertaining and scholarly book. |
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Página ix
... theatre , a sphere in which Dr Granville - Barker moves by sovereign right as actor , dramatist and one of the greatest producers alive , while I am To take stock of all the fresh light he has thrown upon the play would require the re ...
... theatre , a sphere in which Dr Granville - Barker moves by sovereign right as actor , dramatist and one of the greatest producers alive , while I am To take stock of all the fresh light he has thrown upon the play would require the re ...
Página x
... theatre itself , as will presently appear , while it was encouraging to learn from Mr Esme Percy that on one of the two technical points contested by Dr Granville - Barker I had the support of no less a person than the late Mr William ...
... theatre itself , as will presently appear , while it was encouraging to learn from Mr Esme Percy that on one of the two technical points contested by Dr Granville - Barker I had the support of no less a person than the late Mr William ...
Página xi
... theatre walls . Of these performances the most notable were those given by Mr Michael MacOwan at the Westminster Theatre in July last . Having produced Dr Granville - Barker's Waste a year ago , he decided , with fine impartiality and a ...
... theatre walls . Of these performances the most notable were those given by Mr Michael MacOwan at the Westminster Theatre in July last . Having produced Dr Granville - Barker's Waste a year ago , he decided , with fine impartiality and a ...
Página xii
... theatre , modern and Elizabethan , as much critical acumen and as much playgoing experience as may be found in one individual . Believing as I do that there are very few Englishmen who possess these qualities in fuller measure than Mr ...
... theatre , modern and Elizabethan , as much critical acumen and as much playgoing experience as may be found in one individual . Believing as I do that there are very few Englishmen who possess these qualities in fuller measure than Mr ...
Página xiii
... theatre , however accomplished be his production of modern plays , is a blind guide so far as Shakespeare is concerned . Scarcely less dangerous , on questions of stage - technique , is the judg- ment of the man of the study who lacks ...
... theatre , however accomplished be his production of modern plays , is a blind guide so far as Shakespeare is concerned . Scarcely less dangerous , on questions of stage - technique , is the judg- ment of the man of the study who lacks ...
Índice
THE ROAD TO ELSINORE BEING AN EPISTLE DEDICATORY TO DR W W GREG | 1 |
THE TRAGIC BURDEN | 25 |
The state of Denmark | 26 |
Gertrudes sin | 39 |
The task | 44 |
GHOST OR DEVIL? | 51 |
Modern difficulties | 52 |
Shakespeares realism | 55 |
HAMLETS MAKEUP | 199 |
The turningpoint | 200 |
Sore distraction | 205 |
The heart of the mystery | 217 |
Dramatic emphasis | 229 |
FAILURE AND TRIUMPH | 239 |
Fortunes pipe | 240 |
The bedroom scene | 246 |
Problems of Elizabethan spiritualism | 60 |
The four witnesses | 66 |
Other superstitions | 75 |
The cellarage scene | 78 |
ANTIC DISPOSITION | 87 |
Its origin purpose and character | 88 |
Hamlet and Ophelia | 101 |
Thwarted ambition | 114 |
The nunnery scene | 125 |
THE MULTIPLE MOUSETRAP | 137 |
The parallel subplots | 138 |
The problem of the dumbshow | 144 |
Miching mallecho | 153 |
Nephew to the King | 164 |
The play scene restored | 174 |
Eclipse | 258 |
Hamlet returns | 265 |
The hero at bay | 276 |
APPENDICES | 291 |
A The Adultery of Gertrude | 292 |
B The Funeral of Ophelia | 295 |
C The Identity of the Gonzago troupe | 301 |
D Mr T S Eliots Theory of Hamlet | 305 |
Shakespeares Knowledge of A Treatise of Melancholie by Timothy Bright | 309 |
Hamlet as Cesare Borgia | 321 |
NOTES to The Second Edition | 335 |
343 | |
347 | |
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Palavras e frases frequentes
¹ Vide actor Admiral's men antic disposition apparition appears audience beginning cellarage scene Cesare Borgia Claudius Claudius's critics death Denmark dialogue distemper doubt Dowden Dr Bradley Dr Johnson dramatic dramatist dumb-show Elizabethan Elsinore excitement explain eyes fact father follows Gertrude Ghost give Gonzago Gonzago-play Granville-Barker groundlings Hamlet's character Hamlet's mind hand hero hint Horatio imagination incestuous intended interpretation King Hamlet King's Laertes Lavater lines lord Lucianus madness Marcellus means melancholy modern mother murder nature never notes nunnery scene once Ophelia Osric passage play scene players plot poison Polonius Prince problem prologue Queen question quoted reader reference revenge Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Second Quarto seems seen Shakespeare Shakespearean Tragedy Shakespearian soliloquy soul speak spectators speech spirit stage suggests tells theatre theory thing thou thought tion tragedy Treatise uncle uttered W. W. Greg whole words
Referências a este livro
The End of Kinship: "measure for Measure", Incest, and the Idea of Universal ... Marc Shell Pré-visualização indisponível - 1988 |