All's Well that Ends WellClarendon Press, 1993 - Počet stran: 245 All's Well that Ends Well receives, in this new edition, the full reconsideration for which it is overdue. After a long theatrical and critical history marked by avoidance and simplification, the play's dislocations of desire and clashing ideologies of class and gender are made newly accessible to readers, performers, and audiences. All's Well that Ends Well found little favor in the infrequent productions of earlier centuries, and was drastically reshaped by Garrick toward farce and by Kemble toward purity and pathos. But artists of recent decades such as Guthrie, Moshinsky, and Nunn have used the very discords of style and genre once seen as defects as sources of theatrical power and complexity, just as critics from various perspectives--feminist, sociological, generic, psychological--have found new value and pertinence in a play that is itself a deconstructed fairy tale. Susan Snyder's Introduction makes a distinguished contribution to criticism of the play, and the edition, offering freshly considered text, is fully and helpfully annotated. |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-3 z 29
Strana 15
... cause notion almost as soon as it is enunciated , for the First Lord smooths over his king's lack of co - operation by saying that young French- men will no doubt be quick to follow the colours , not because of the rightness of the cause ...
... cause notion almost as soon as it is enunciated , for the First Lord smooths over his king's lack of co - operation by saying that young French- men will no doubt be quick to follow the colours , not because of the rightness of the cause ...
Strana 114
... cause wherein the honour Of my dear father's gift stands chief in power , I come to tender it and my appliance With all bound humbleness . KING We thank you , maiden , But may not be so credulous of cure , When our most learnèd doctors ...
... cause wherein the honour Of my dear father's gift stands chief in power , I come to tender it and my appliance With all bound humbleness . KING We thank you , maiden , But may not be so credulous of cure , When our most learnèd doctors ...
Strana 232
... cause the Count , knowing the things she had spoken to be true and perceiving her constant mind and good wit and the ... causing her to rise up , and embraced and kissed her , acknowledging her again for his lawful wife . And after he ...
... cause the Count , knowing the things she had spoken to be true and perceiving her constant mind and good wit and the ... causing her to rise up , and embraced and kissed her , acknowledging her again for his lawful wife . And after he ...
Obsah
Introduction | 1 |
The Mingled Yarn | 8 |
Alls Well that Ends Well as a Problem Play | 16 |
Autorská práva | |
Další části 8 nejsou zobrazeny.
Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
Act 3 Scene Alice Walker All's bed-trick Beltramo Bertram Bowers CAPELL character CLOWN Comedies Compositor conj Count Count of Roussillon COUNTESS court cure daughter death Diana DIANA KING drum Duke Duke of Florence editors Edward de Souza emendation Ends Enter Helen entrance direction Exeunt Exit farewell Florence Florentine fool Foul Papers French lords gentleman gentlewoman Giletta give HANMER hast hath hear honour Hunter husband i'th King King's knave lady LAFEU letter Love's Labour's Won madam maid marriage marry meaning Measure for Measure mother Narbonne noble Oxford Paroles perhaps phrase pray Problem Comedies prose F proverb reading ring Roussillon ROWE SECOND LORD sense sexual Shake Shakespeare SOLDIER Sonnets speak speech prefixes stage directions Stratford-upon-Avon suggests thee THEOBALD thine things Thirlby thou Tilley tion Troilus unto virginity vols WIDOW wife woman word young ΙΟ
Odkazy na tuto knihu
An Introduction to Literature, Criticism and Theory Andrew Bennett,Nicholas Royle Náhled není k dispozici. - 2004 |