Passion Made Public: Elizabethan Lyric, Gender, and PerformanceUniversity of Illinois Press, 1995 - 279 páginas |
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... father , Donald Graham Henderson , and for my mother , Alaine Marsh Henderson , whose intelligence , love of language , and enduring vitality never cease to amaze . Contents Acknowledgments ix Introduction I ONE Elizabethan Contexts 33 TWO.
... father , Donald Graham Henderson , and for my mother , Alaine Marsh Henderson , whose intelligence , love of language , and enduring vitality never cease to amaze . Contents Acknowledgments ix Introduction I ONE Elizabethan Contexts 33 TWO.
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... language compounded of hyperbole , more or less witty con- ceits , word - play , oxymorons and endless repetition , usually focused on the versifier's unrequited love ( real or imagined ) for a disdainful or otherwise unattainable ...
... language compounded of hyperbole , more or less witty con- ceits , word - play , oxymorons and endless repetition , usually focused on the versifier's unrequited love ( real or imagined ) for a disdainful or otherwise unattainable ...
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... language to come in the form of a marriage oath , distinguishes this romance from a simple repetition of the courtly tradition . During the sonnet , Romeo and Juliet coexist apart from the other Vero- nese in their own lyrical world of ...
... language to come in the form of a marriage oath , distinguishes this romance from a simple repetition of the courtly tradition . During the sonnet , Romeo and Juliet coexist apart from the other Vero- nese in their own lyrical world of ...
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... language and assumptions of much literary criticism , both in its preoccupation with the poet's " strength " ( an emphasis converted into theory by Harold Bloom , whom Elizabeth Bruss [ 312 ] called " the Norman Mailer of our ...
... language and assumptions of much literary criticism , both in its preoccupation with the poet's " strength " ( an emphasis converted into theory by Harold Bloom , whom Elizabeth Bruss [ 312 ] called " the Norman Mailer of our ...
Página 16
... Language most shewes a man : speake that I may see thee , " wrote Ben Jonson in his Timbre , or Discoveries ( Herford and Simpson 625 ) . In the comedies of Jonson and his contemporaries , verbal style often revealed character in an ...
... Language most shewes a man : speake that I may see thee , " wrote Ben Jonson in his Timbre , or Discoveries ( Herford and Simpson 625 ) . In the comedies of Jonson and his contemporaries , verbal style often revealed character in an ...
Índice
Elizabethan Contexts | 33 |
Elizabeths Watchful Eye and George Peeks Court Drama Female Power and the Lyric of Praise | 85 |
Unhappy Dido Marlowes Lyric Strains | 120 |
Shakespeares Laboring Lovers Lyric and Its Discontents | 167 |
Legacy | 214 |
251 | |
267 | |
Palavras e frases frequentes
Aeneas Aeneas's aesthetic aristocratic Arraignment of Paris artistic audience authority beauty Berowne Berowne's characters Christopher Marlowe Colin comic complex context courtiers courtly love courtly lyricism create critical cultural desire Diana Dido Dido's discourse earthly echo Elizabeth Elizabethan Elizabethan lyrical emphasizes English erotic female power female sovereignty feminine fiction figure Gascoigne Gascoigne's gender George Gascoigne George Peele goddess ideal Kenilworth ladies language literary lords love lyrics Love's Labour's Lost lovers lyric poetry lyrical drama lyricist male Marlowe Marlowe's lyric marriage masculine Midsummer Night's Dream moral narrative Neoplatonic obviously Oenone onstage pageant passion Peele Peele's performance perspective Petrarchan Petrarchan sonnets Petrarchism play's playwright poem poet poetic political praise queen representation rhetoric role romantic Romeo and Juliet Rosaline satiric scene sexual Shakespeare's Sidney Sidney's social song sonnet sovereign speaker speech Spenser stage style Tamburlaine temporal tensions theatrical thou tion tradition tropes verse vision voice woman women words
Passagens conhecidas
Página 5 - But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks! It is the east, and Juliet is the sun ! — Arise, fair sun, and kill the envious moon, Who is already sick and pale with grief, That thou her maid art far more fair than she...
Página 21 - O western wind, when wilt thou blow, That the small rain down can rain? Christ, that my love were in my arms, And I in my bed again!
Página 1 - Good pilgrim, you do wrong your hand too much, Which mannerly devotion shows in this ; For saints have hands that pilgrims' hands do touch, And palm to palm is holy palmers
Referências a este livro
Sonnet Sequences and Social Distinction in Renaissance England Christopher Warley Pré-visualização limitada - 2005 |
Dwelling in Possibility: Women Poets and Critics on Poetry Yopie Prins,Maeera Shreiber Pré-visualização limitada - 1997 |