"A Diamond, Though Set in Horn": Philip Massinger's Attitude to SpectacleInstitut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik, Universität Salzburg, 1984 - Počet stran: 282 |
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Strana 7
... Tragedy enacts the foregoing imagery of death and corruption . The correlation between word and show in The Revenger's Tragedy typifies the emblematic awareness which remained so strong in the Renaissance . The Jacobean stage has moved ...
... Tragedy enacts the foregoing imagery of death and corruption . The correlation between word and show in The Revenger's Tragedy typifies the emblematic awareness which remained so strong in the Renaissance . The Jacobean stage has moved ...
Strana 37
... Tragedy ( 1979 ) , 9 , 8 . 28a Two other factors should be mentioned : first , the existence of the solid background of biblical and homiletic attacks on false covering , profane revelling , and doomed finery , and , second , the effect ...
... Tragedy ( 1979 ) , 9 , 8 . 28a Two other factors should be mentioned : first , the existence of the solid background of biblical and homiletic attacks on false covering , profane revelling , and doomed finery , and , second , the effect ...
Strana 81
... Tragedy , RD n.s. 12 ( 1981 ) , 93 ) . Emblematism is , however , obviously likely to be less common in Massinger than in ' Highly stylized and pageant - like plays like the tragedies of Tourneur , Middleton and , to some extent ...
... Tragedy , RD n.s. 12 ( 1981 ) , 93 ) . Emblematism is , however , obviously likely to be less common in Massinger than in ' Highly stylized and pageant - like plays like the tragedies of Tourneur , Middleton and , to some extent ...
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action Actor actually already Antiochus appearance associations audience awareness become Cambridge captive Caroline Cavalier celebration ceremony characters chariot City clear contrast course court courtly dance death detail directions Domitian Drama draw Duke effects elements Elizabethan English enters entry example expression eyes fact feel Fletcher follows Fortune further give glorious glory Honour ideas important influence inner intended interest John King ladies later least less Lover masque Massinger Massinger's meaning moral nature once Oxford Peace performed perhaps physical play Poems political pomp possible present procession Queen reality references remains Renaissance Revels Roman Roman Actor royal scene seems seen sense Shakespeare significance similar simply slave spectacle spectacular spiritual stage suggest theatre theatrical tradition Tragedy triumph triumphal true victory virtue visual visual effects vols