Patterns in Shakespearian TragedyRoutledge, 13.09.2013 - 224 Seiten First published in 1960. Patterns in Shakespearian Tragedy is an exploration of man's relation to his universe and the way in which it seeks to postulate a moral order. Shakespeare's development is treated accordingly as a growth in moral vision. His movement from play to play is carefully explored, and in the treatment of each tragedy the emphasis is on the manner in which its central moral theme shapes the various elements of drama |
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... offers for critical examination. Any analysis of Shakespeare's achievement must be a partial one, a reflection of what the particular critic finds most significant and of what his own intellectual milieu has conditioned him to seek ...
... offers for critical examination. Any analysis of Shakespeare's achievement must be a partial one, a reflection of what the particular critic finds most significant and of what his own intellectual milieu has conditioned him to seek ...
Seite 1
... offers for critical examination . Any analysis of Shakespeare's achievement must be a partial one , a reflection of what the particular critic finds most significant and of what his own intellectual milieu has conditioned him to seek ...
... offers for critical examination . Any analysis of Shakespeare's achievement must be a partial one , a reflection of what the particular critic finds most significant and of what his own intellectual milieu has conditioned him to seek ...
Seite 3
... offers us a conclusion to which only a profound pessimism could reconcile us ' . The limitations of Bradley's concentration on character have been stressed from different points of view by L. C. Knights , ' How Many Children Had Lady ...
... offers us a conclusion to which only a profound pessimism could reconcile us ' . The limitations of Bradley's concentration on character have been stressed from different points of view by L. C. Knights , ' How Many Children Had Lady ...
Seite 13
... offer answers in imaginative terms which might reaffirm most forcefully the belief in an ordered purposive universe towards which all his tragedies tend . After this his relentless probing could lead him only to the paradox implicit in ...
... offer answers in imaginative terms which might reaffirm most forcefully the belief in an ordered purposive universe towards which all his tragedies tend . After this his relentless probing could lead him only to the paradox implicit in ...
Seite 17
... offered him in the choral commentary of his brother , Marcus , and he moves towards inevitable damnation . By the life journey of his hero , Shakespeare explores in imaginative terms the universal way of damnation , for Titus becomes a ...
... offered him in the choral commentary of his brother , Marcus , and he moves towards inevitable damnation . By the life journey of his hero , Shakespeare explores in imaginative terms the universal way of damnation , for Titus becomes a ...
Inhalt
1 | |
14 | |
King John Richard II Julius Caesar | 36 |
Hamlet | 65 |
Othello | 91 |
King Lear | 116 |
Timon of Athens and Macbeth | 137 |
Antony and Cleopatra and Coriolanus | 168 |
Index +55 14 36 65 91 116 137 168 | 203 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accept action already Antony appearance attain attempt audience becomes beginning bond Brutus Caesar calls cause character Christian Claudius clear Cleopatra comes concerned Coriolanus damnation death delusion deny Desdemona designed destroy destruction developed divine dramatic Elizabethan emphasize England evil fall father fear feeling final follow forces fortune function ghost give Gloucester God's Hamlet hand hero honour human Iago John justice kind King lead Lear Lear's learned lines live London Macbeth madness man's means moral murder nature never offer opposing Othello passion pattern play political pride reality reason reflects regeneration rejection represents revenge Richard Rome Romeo and Juliet scene sense serve Shake Shakespeare Shakespearian Tragedy shows sins soul specific speech spite stands story suffering symbol thee theme thou Timon Titus Andronicus tradition tragedy tragic true turn universe victory virtue Wilson York