Tamburlaine the Great

Přední strana obálky
Manchester University Press, 1998 - Počet stran: 226
Tamburlaine the Great achieved, and sustained, great success on the Elizabethan stage. And it speaks provocatively to our own time, when it has been the subject of numerous major productions. Timur Khan--to give Tamburlaine his original name--was long perceived in the West as a ruthless conqueror, whose career was marked by vindictive massacres, the sacking of enemy cities and the assertion of egotistic will. In this light, his career connects with twentieth-century experience of genocide, ideological justifications of brutality and conflicts of rival religions’ faiths. It is significant that the 1990s--four centuries on from Marlowe’s play--have seen the development in Uzbekistan, of a vindication of Timur, perceived as a heroic and admirable figure in this state newly "liberated" from the Soviet hegemony.

Vyhledávání v knize

Obsah

Oddíl 1
1
Oddíl 2
33
Oddíl 3
41
Oddíl 4
42
Oddíl 5
60
Oddíl 6
79
Oddíl 7
97
Oddíl 8
113
Oddíl 9
135
Oddíl 10
137
Oddíl 11
138
Oddíl 12
156
Oddíl 13
169
Oddíl 14
190
Oddíl 15
207
Autorská práva

Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny

Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví

O autorovi (1998)

J. S Cunningham was, until his retirement, Professor of English at the University of Leicester Eithne Henson is a retired Lecturer of English Literature.

Bibliografické údaje