Shakespeare: the Comedies: A Collection of Critical EssaysKenneth Muir Prentice-Hall, 1965 - 183 Seiten From the Back Cover: Despite differences between Shakespeare's time and ours in language, in taste, in mores, his comedies still produce that sure sign of success-uninhibited laughter. But, as the critics in this volume ably contend, the world of Shakespearean comedy is made of more than make-believe, quick action, and brilliant repartee. Shakespeare's genius was to probe, delicately but deeply, subtle and enduring characteristics of humanity. Each play is set in a land of its own, yet through these lands move characters recognizable in our own world. The reality of these characters is only enhanced by ethereal creatures of the imagination like Puck and Ariel, who weave about them poetic merriment unsurpassed in comic literature. Among the essays in this volume are: As You Like It / Helen Gardener -- Winter's Tale / Derek Traversi -- Helena / G. Wilson Knight -- Shakespeare's Method: The Merchant of Venice / J. Middleton Murry. |
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Seite 123
... nobility , much of Book II is taken up with the subject . Shakespeare in his comedy makes little use of the figure of the flatterer , and this differ- entiates him from Chapman , Jonson , and Middleton , who took the parasite of ancient ...
... nobility , much of Book II is taken up with the subject . Shakespeare in his comedy makes little use of the figure of the flatterer , and this differ- entiates him from Chapman , Jonson , and Middleton , who took the parasite of ancient ...
Seite 126
... nobility . One standard commonplace on nobility took shape : that lineage alone was not enough , but that the son of a noble family should increase and not degrade the glory of his ancestors . 19 Aristotle had said that Nobility ...
... nobility . One standard commonplace on nobility took shape : that lineage alone was not enough , but that the son of a noble family should increase and not degrade the glory of his ancestors . 19 Aristotle had said that Nobility ...
Seite 130
... nobility any real value.31 Nobility , he says , cannot be defined by riches , which in themselves are vile , 32 or by time , because all men ultimately derive from a common stock , but only by its effects . The necessary outcome or ...
... nobility any real value.31 Nobility , he says , cannot be defined by riches , which in themselves are vile , 32 or by time , because all men ultimately derive from a common stock , but only by its effects . The necessary outcome or ...
Inhalt
INTRODUCTIONKenneth Muir | 1 |
THEMES AND STRUCTURE IN THE COMEDY OF ERRORS | 11 |
A MIDSUMMERNIGHTS DREAMErnest Schanzer | 32 |
Urheberrecht | |
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