The Absent ShakespeareFairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 1994 - Počet stran: 174 Building on recent textual studies of King Lear and Hamlet, which compare Folio and Quarto differences, Mirsky sees them not just as an opportunity to view the playwright revising toward more skillful staging, greater complexity of plot, and ambiguity of character. The process of revision also exposes a personal Shakespeare. Differences between Folio and Quarto texts show the growing sophistication of Shakespeare's dramatic craft and reveal how the playwright changed as he matured. The book presents a dramatist maturing in time, grappling with incest, patricide, filicide, erotic love, and the inevitability of death. It finds this naked Shakespeare in Macbeth and The Tempest as well, expressed in the riddles of the plays. The author refers not only to the text of Shakespeare but also to the plays in performance - suggesting how the actor's reading and interpretation lay bare the intentions of the playwright on the stage. |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-5 z 39
Strana 19
... sexual desire toward which the old King , dying , instinc- tively gropes . He has no real wish to give Cordelia , her " young love , " to suitors , either the clinging embrace implicit in " The Vines of France " or the cowish Duke ...
... sexual desire toward which the old King , dying , instinc- tively gropes . He has no real wish to give Cordelia , her " young love , " to suitors , either the clinging embrace implicit in " The Vines of France " or the cowish Duke ...
Strana 21
... sexual condescension to him , Lear attacks his daughter's body . He inserts himself in a wish of rape to tear her womb . The syllables are a crowbar in his mouth . Suspend thy purpose , if thou didst intend To make this Creature ...
... sexual condescension to him , Lear attacks his daughter's body . He inserts himself in a wish of rape to tear her womb . The syllables are a crowbar in his mouth . Suspend thy purpose , if thou didst intend To make this Creature ...
Strana 22
... sexual hunger into adulteresses , obscures the King's behavior . Is it not possible that Lear , sensing the vacuity of their beds , comes with his hundred knights to en- force a claim to which he can not openly admit ? Gonerill's com ...
... sexual hunger into adulteresses , obscures the King's behavior . Is it not possible that Lear , sensing the vacuity of their beds , comes with his hundred knights to en- force a claim to which he can not openly admit ? Gonerill's com ...
Strana 23
... sexual status is ambivalent ) in speech and persona stands always at the point of metamorpho- sis , of changing from one person to another . It is an obsessive stage action for a playwright who understands the power of hallucina- tion ...
... sexual status is ambivalent ) in speech and persona stands always at the point of metamorpho- sis , of changing from one person to another . It is an obsessive stage action for a playwright who understands the power of hallucina- tion ...
Strana 26
Omlouváme se, ale obsah této stránky je nepřístupný..
Omlouváme se, ale obsah této stránky je nepřístupný..
Obsah
15 | |
19 | |
The Itch Revises | 33 |
Hamlets Father | 47 |
The Shadows Dance | 71 |
Macbeths Child | 99 |
What Prospero Knows | 125 |
Shakespeares Myth | 141 |
Notes | 147 |
169 | |
172 | |
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Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
action actor Alfred Harbage ambition anger anxiety audience Banquo begins Caliban calls child Claudius Claudius's conscience Cordelia court cries dark daughter dead death doth drama dream echo Edgar Edited Edmund erotic evil fantasy father fear Ferdinand flesh Folio Fool foul Gertrude Gertrude's Ghost Gloucester Gloucester's Gonerill grave Hamlet hath hear Heaven Hesiod Horatio husband incestuous innocent joke King Lear King's Lady Macbeth Laertes Laertes's latter Lear's lines look Lord Macduff madness magic mind Miranda mock mole mother murder nature never Oedipus Ophelia Osric Pillicock play playwright plot Polonius Prince Prince Hamlet Prince's Prospero question reality reference Regan remark revenge riddle scene Second Quarto seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare sisters sleep soliloquy Sophocles speaks speech stage suggests suicide T. S. Eliot Tempest thee thou tion tragedy Urkowitz W. W. Greg wife William Shakespeare witches word
Oblíbené pasáže
Strana 21 - Hear, Nature, hear ! dear goddess, hear ! Suspend thy purpose, if thou didst intend To make this creature fruitful ! Into her womb convey sterility ! Dry up in her the organs of increase, And from her derogate body never spring A babe to honour her...