Adapting to the Stage: Theatre and the Work of Henry JamesAshgate, 2000 - 195 páginas The American novelist and playwright, Henry James, was drawn to the theatre and the shifting conventions of drama throughout his writing career. This study demonstrates that from the 1890s onwards James concentrated on adapting his novels and stories to and from the stage, and increasingly employed metaphors that spoke of novel-writing in terms of playwriting. Christopher Greenwood argues that these metaphors helped James to conceive himself as an artist who composed characters dramatically and visually, and in doing so sets his novels significantly apart from those of his contemporaries. |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-3 de 27
Página 31
... speech on curtain - up , Chivers opens as if in response to a question directed at him from upstairs , off - stage ( which we have not heard ) : CHIVERS stands at the foot of the staircase , looking up , as if in conversation with ...
... speech on curtain - up , Chivers opens as if in response to a question directed at him from upstairs , off - stage ( which we have not heard ) : CHIVERS stands at the foot of the staircase , looking up , as if in conversation with ...
Página 158
... speech , the dumbness and duplicities and concealments of assertion , the bafflement of soul and body by their inarticulateness and by their terror of articulateness.9 Rose ( like many other of James's characters , particularly those of ...
... speech , the dumbness and duplicities and concealments of assertion , the bafflement of soul and body by their inarticulateness and by their terror of articulateness.9 Rose ( like many other of James's characters , particularly those of ...
Página 159
... speech , it implies the existence of a limit to what there is to be communicated and , indeed , provides a spectacle of extraordinarily formal communication . When speech comes to communicating something of importance , as the above ...
... speech , it implies the existence of a limit to what there is to be communicated and , indeed , provides a spectacle of extraordinarily formal communication . When speech comes to communicating something of importance , as the above ...
Índice
Psychological Space in The Summersoft Group and the Late Plays | 25 |
Ellipsis and the Fourth Wall | 96 |
Abandoning the Soliloquy | 116 |
Direitos de autor | |
6 outras secções não apresentadas
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Adapting to the Stage: Theatre and the Work of Henry James Chris Greenwood Pré-visualização limitada - 2017 |
Adapting to the Stage: Theatre and the Work of Henry James Chris Greenwood Pré-visualização indisponível - 2018 |
Adapting to the Stage: Theatre and the Work of Henry James Chris Greenwood Pré-visualização indisponível - 2017 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
achieve action actors adapted American appeared artist attempt attention audience Awkward Age become characters comes communication condition connection contemporary criticism Daisy Miller demonstrates describes developed dimension direct drama effect elements English face fiction figure Fleda French Gereth gesture give hand Henry James High imagination indicates interest involved James's kind letter light limits living London look manner material means metaphor moment moral motivation movement narrator nature Newman novel objects observation Owen painting particularly past performance person physical plot position possible Poynton Preface present produced psychological reading reference relations relationship remarks represent Rose scene secret sense separated situation social soliloquy space spectator speech stage story success suggest takes theatre theatrical things thinking tradition turn understanding visual well-made play whole Winterbourne witness writing York