The Artistry of Shakespeare's ProseRoutledge, 13. 9. 2013 - Počet stran: 464 First published in 1968. This re-issues the revised edition of 1979. The Artistry of Shakespeare's Prose is the first detailed study of the use of prose in the plays. It begins by defining the different dramatic and emotional functions which Shakespeare gave to prose and verse, and proceeds to analyse the recurrent stylistic devices used in his prose. The general and particular application of prose is then studied through all the plays, in roughly chronological order. |
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Strana
... meaning. In addition to the principal dangers2 inherent in extracting a theme (which often turns out to be a moral commonplace) from the living tissue of a play, and implicitly suggesting that Shakespeare was offering a discussion of ...
... meaning. In addition to the principal dangers2 inherent in extracting a theme (which often turns out to be a moral commonplace) from the living tissue of a play, and implicitly suggesting that Shakespeare was offering a discussion of ...
Strana
... meaning of the word. Similarly if the plot involves a disguise, or a failure in trust, then there will inevitably be a comment on the discrepancy between appearance and reality (but how inadequate it is to describe Much Ado About ...
... meaning of the word. Similarly if the plot involves a disguise, or a failure in trust, then there will inevitably be a comment on the discrepancy between appearance and reality (but how inadequate it is to describe Much Ado About ...
Strana
... meaning) is a decorum which he can no longer maintain, and as his 'wife' begs off on doctor's orders he catches up her last words ('I hope this reason stands for my excuse') and puns on them, relapsing into the norm of clown's bawdy and ...
... meaning) is a decorum which he can no longer maintain, and as his 'wife' begs off on doctor's orders he catches up her last words ('I hope this reason stands for my excuse') and puns on them, relapsing into the norm of clown's bawdy and ...
Strana
... meaning. The whole tenor of Elizabethan rhetorical and literary theory (of which the conclusion to Puttenham's Arte is the most memorable statement) was that the writer must use 'artifice' assiduously, but must transform it until it ...
... meaning. The whole tenor of Elizabethan rhetorical and literary theory (of which the conclusion to Puttenham's Arte is the most memorable statement) was that the writer must use 'artifice' assiduously, but must transform it until it ...
Strana
... meaning.1 The choice of such constituent parts as we intend to analyse must not be imposed from without, for it will depend in each case on the individual work, and in Shakespeare's case may vary from play to play. In reading his prose ...
... meaning.1 The choice of such constituent parts as we intend to analyse must not be imposed from without, for it will depend in each case on the individual work, and in Shakespeare's case may vary from play to play. In reading his prose ...
Obsah
From Clown to Character | |
The World of Falstaff | |
Gay Comedy | |
Two Tragic Heroes | |
Serious Comedy | |
Clowns Villians Madmen | |
The Return of Comedy | |
Conclusion | |
Notes | |
Index | |
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