Venus and Adonis: Critical EssaysRoutledge, 01/02/1997 - 448 páginas This is the first collection of critical essays devoted exclusively to Shakespeare's first published work, his long narrative poem Venus and Adonis which established his reputation as the literary darling of London and the heir of Ovid. Particularly important is the book's coverage of the little-known presence of Venus and Adonis on stage.A s |
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... sensual, immoral and thoroughly reprehensible” (“Second Chance” 87). Ultimately, Lever argues, “Venus and Adonis, fallen and risen as Cleopatra and her Antony, live to triumph in the kingdom of the second chance” (88). The first chapter ...
... sensual, immoral and thoroughly reprehensible” (“Second Chance” 87). Ultimately, Lever argues, “Venus and Adonis, fallen and risen as Cleopatra and her Antony, live to triumph in the kingdom of the second chance” (88). The first chapter ...
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... sensual, yet artistically it was considered too cold. (“The Poems” 19) We might qualify Lever's assertion by noting, as Roe does, that “Later Romantics such as Keats and Coleridge gave special praise to Venus and Adonis for its ...
... sensual, yet artistically it was considered too cold. (“The Poems” 19) We might qualify Lever's assertion by noting, as Roe does, that “Later Romantics such as Keats and Coleridge gave special praise to Venus and Adonis for its ...
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... sensual love, so that “when Adonis is killed beauty is killed, and the world is left in black chaos.” T.W. Baldwin also preached that “Adonis is Love and Beauty, and when he dies Chaos is come again.” Robert P. Miller takes the high ...
... sensual love, so that “when Adonis is killed beauty is killed, and the world is left in black chaos.” T.W. Baldwin also preached that “Adonis is Love and Beauty, and when he dies Chaos is come again.” Robert P. Miller takes the high ...
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... sensual love opposing a higher spiritual love (Shakespeare and the Common Understanding 161). In a very influential ... sensuality is bound to fail. The play of language in the poem sees to that. (Introduction 5) Roe is right. The ...
... sensual love opposing a higher spiritual love (Shakespeare and the Common Understanding 161). In a very influential ... sensuality is bound to fail. The play of language in the poem sees to that. (Introduction 5) Roe is right. The ...
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... sensuality” (Muir Shakespeare, 51). These readers interrogate and destabilize objections voiced earlier by seventeenth-century moralists, nineteenth-century puritan readers like Ezekiel Sanford, and critics like Pearson and Miller. They ...
... sensuality” (Muir Shakespeare, 51). These readers interrogate and destabilize objections voiced earlier by seventeenth-century moralists, nineteenth-century puritan readers like Ezekiel Sanford, and critics like Pearson and Miller. They ...
Índice
Venus and Adonis and the Critics | 66 |
Venus and Adonis in Production | 291 |
New Essays on Venus and Adonis | 300 |
Chronological Bibliography of Scholarship and Commentary on Venus and Adonis Including Editions and Reviews of Performances Philip C Kolin | 405 |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
Adonis’s allegorical amorous beauty boar boar’s Burghley character classical comedy comic conflict Coppélia Critical Essays death desire doth dramatic Dubrow Earl of Southampton edition Elizabeth Elizabethan English epyllion eros erotic female figures finds first flesh flower goddess of love hath Hermaphroditus Hero and Leander horse hunt imagery interpretation kiss Kolin language lines lips literary Literature London loue love’s lover Lucrece lust lust’s male Mars Metamorphoses Midsummer Night’s Dream moral mother Muir myth mythological Narcissus Narrative Poems narrator nature Neoplatonic Ovid Ovid’s Ovidian Oxford painting passion peare plays poem’s poet poetic poetry Princeton Rape Rape of Lucrece readers reflects Renaissance represents rhetorical role sense sensual sexual Shakes Shakespeare Studies Shakespeare’s poem Shakespeare’s Venus Sheidley significance Sonnets stanza story suggests sweet symbol thee thou tion Titian tradition trans Venus and Adonis Venus’s William William Shakespeare York young youth