Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Volume 83Gale Research Company, 1984 |
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Página 15
... less a Lacanian law of the father or absent phallus as signifier than it does an end to play : by dying and hence conferring fully adult status on his daughter , the father here makes the antics of the lovers seem more than ever only ...
... less a Lacanian law of the father or absent phallus as signifier than it does an end to play : by dying and hence conferring fully adult status on his daughter , the father here makes the antics of the lovers seem more than ever only ...
Página 28
... less urgent and less sexy than that of Aufidius , they , contemplating a lifetime of shared imprisonment , relocate the erotic and social properties of the family within their friendship : We are one another's wife , ever begetting New ...
... less urgent and less sexy than that of Aufidius , they , contemplating a lifetime of shared imprisonment , relocate the erotic and social properties of the family within their friendship : We are one another's wife , ever begetting New ...
Página 187
... less stable than literature or even another performance medium such as film . " When one puts on play , " comments Peter Brook in The Open Door , " inevitably , at the beginning it has no form , it is just words on paper or ideas . The ...
... less stable than literature or even another performance medium such as film . " When one puts on play , " comments Peter Brook in The Open Door , " inevitably , at the beginning it has no form , it is just words on paper or ideas . The ...
Conteúdo
Cumulative Character Index | 355 |
Cumulative Topic Index | 367 |
Cumulative Topic Index by Play | 391 |
Direitos autorais | |
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abuse Achilles appears Arcite audience Bassanio becomes Brutus Cambridge catastrophe characters Christian comedy comic Cordelia critics daughter death desire Diomedes disguise dramatic Edgar Edmund effeminacy Elizabethan Emilia English erotic essay Falstaff fantasy father feel Fool friends friendship Gentlemen of Verona Gloucester Gloucester's gods Goneril Greek grotesque body Hamlet Hector Helen Henry heterosexual homosexual homosocial Horatio husband identity John Kent King Lear language Lear's literary London lover male bonds manly marriage masculinity ment Merchant of Venice Merry Wives nature Noble Kinsmen Palamon Pandarus petty treason play's plot political Press prince Proteus Regan relationship Renaissance Rosencrantz same-sex says scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's play social sources speak speare speare's speech stage storm story suggests thee theme Thersites thou Timon tion tragedy Troilus and Cressida Troilus's Trojan Troy Twelfth Night Valentine wife Wives of Windsor woman women words York