English Tragedy before Shakespeare (Routledge Revivals): The Development of Dramatic SpeechRoutledge, 13. 5. 2013 - Počet stran: 306 First published in English in 1961, this reissue relates the problems of form and style to the development of dramatic speech in pre-Shakespearean tragedy. The work offers positive standards by which to assess the development of pre-Shakespearean drama and, by tracing certain characteristics in Elizabethan tragedy which were to have a bearing on Shakespeare’s dramatic technique, helps to illuminate the foundations on which Shakespeare built his dramatic oeuvre. |
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Strana
... tracing certain characteristics in Elizabethan tragedy which were to have a bearing on Shakespeare's dramatic technique, helps to illuminate the foundations on which Shakespeare built his dramatic oeuvre. Routledge Revivals.
... tracing certain characteristics in Elizabethan tragedy which were to have a bearing on Shakespeare's dramatic technique, helps to illuminate the foundations on which Shakespeare built his dramatic oeuvre. Routledge Revivals.
Strana 12
... technique, for in many plays the style cannot be adequately grasped if we take the set speech alone as our point of departure. But this would have demanded a fundamental widening in the scope of our study, no doubt involving some ...
... technique, for in many plays the style cannot be adequately grasped if we take the set speech alone as our point of departure. But this would have demanded a fundamental widening in the scope of our study, no doubt involving some ...
Strana 13
... technique of oratory, eloquence comes to mean the ability to communicate by the medium of words alone a wide variety of man's deepest emotions. This ability we find in Shakespeare, but we should not find it had not the playwrights who ...
... technique of oratory, eloquence comes to mean the ability to communicate by the medium of words alone a wide variety of man's deepest emotions. This ability we find in Shakespeare, but we should not find it had not the playwrights who ...
Strana 15
... technique of language by which a particular content of thought is clothed in words. Moreover, the 'devices' of style, especially those that turn up again and again as established stylistic artifices and 'figures', are very often removed ...
... technique of language by which a particular content of thought is clothed in words. Moreover, the 'devices' of style, especially those that turn up again and again as established stylistic artifices and 'figures', are very often removed ...
Strana 18
... techniques that are characteristic of the plays then being produced, but also because it is in these forms and techniques that Shakespeare's plays have thfeir roots. Shakespeare's work is everywhere pervaded by conventional and ...
... techniques that are characteristic of the plays then being produced, but also because it is in these forms and techniques that Shakespeare's plays have thfeir roots. Shakespeare's work is everywhere pervaded by conventional and ...
Obsah
ii | |
PART TWO | 56 |
PART THREE | 211 |
Select Bibliography | 293 |
Index of Authors and Subjects | 295 |
Index of Plays | 299 |
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action apostrophe appear beginning characters Christopher Marlowe chronicle plays classical tragedy connexion conventional course death device dialogue diction Doctor Faustus dramatic lament dramatic set speech dramatic speech earlier earth Edward effect Elizabethan drama emotional set speech English drama English tragedy episodes Euripides example expression Faustus feeling formal lament formulas Gismond give Gorboduc grief haue heaven Hieronimo influence Jew of Malta kind King language later lines Locrine long set speeches long speeches longer lyrical M. C. Bradbrook Marlowe Marlowe's means merely Misfortunes of Arthur monologue moral motifs mourning nature parallel passages passionate pattern Peele playwrights plot poetic Porrex pre-Shakespearian drama prose Queen question Renaissance rhetorical figures rhetorical tragedy scene Selimus Seneca Shakespeare shows situation soliloquy sorrow Spanish Tragedy speak speaker stage structure style Tamburlaine technique theme thou tion true Tucker Brooke utterance W. W. Greg whole words Zenocrate