Comic Character in Restoration DramaMouton, 1975 - 151 páginas |
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Página 14
... nature . His inability to know and understand other people points out clearly his limitation . Ignorance of others is not uncommon in the realm of comedy . The victims of comic plots are often unaware of the nature and motives of the ...
... nature . His inability to know and understand other people points out clearly his limitation . Ignorance of others is not uncommon in the realm of comedy . The victims of comic plots are often unaware of the nature and motives of the ...
Página 18
... nature of the natural and artificial character . Dryden differentiates between two types of plays : Comedy consists , though of low persons , yet of natural actions and charac- ters ; I mean such humours , adventures , and designs , as ...
... nature of the natural and artificial character . Dryden differentiates between two types of plays : Comedy consists , though of low persons , yet of natural actions and charac- ters ; I mean such humours , adventures , and designs , as ...
Página 30
... nature of people and is unaware of the way of the world . But , from the moment he begins to think , faces the fact that Cunegonde is neither good nor beautiful , that Pangloss is a fool and happiness is not to be found necessarily in ...
... nature of people and is unaware of the way of the world . But , from the moment he begins to think , faces the fact that Cunegonde is neither good nor beautiful , that Pangloss is a fool and happiness is not to be found necessarily in ...
Índice
A Theory of Comic Character | 7 |
Degrees of Ignorance and Knowledge | 37 |
Fields of Ignorance and Knowledge I | 72 |
Direitos de autor | |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
amused appearance artificial attempts aware Bayes become behavior believes belong blind calls caricatures century comes comic character Complete Plays Congreve Congreve's Country court creates Critical Dealer discovers disguise drama Dryden English fashionable father feels fellow folly fools French frequently Froth Further George give hand human humor husband ignorance intrigue John jokes kind knowledge lack Lady laugh laughter less LIBRARIES live London look Lord manners marry master MICHIGAN Monsieur morals nature never person playwrights plot poet Positive present pretends ready reason recognize remarks Restoration comedy ridiculous says scene seems sense Shadwell Sir Fopling Sir Martin Sir Sampson stage successful Tattle tells theories thing Thomas thought town traits true turn unaware understand University Press usually victims virtue Widow wife woman women writers Wycherly Wycherly's York young