Profoundly Entertaining: An Introduction to Shakespeare's ArtistryXlibris Corporation, 2. 11. 2006 - Počet stran: 506 Profoundly Entertaining offers the general reader a chance to think about Shakespeares artistry in a sustained way. Entertaining as Shakespeares plays are, that quality by itself wouldnt justify the effort required to overcome the difficulty their language poses. Their enduring popularity suggests that, to varying degrees, their audiences sense their profundity even if they cannot confidently articulate their experience. Without any overarching argument to makemerely with admiration for the most intelligent, honest, courageous, and sustained confrontation of human life of which we have written recordthe book invites its readers to accompany Shakespeare on his journey of exploration into the human condition unobscured by prevailing orthodoxies and comforting illusions. |
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Strana 6
... Theater in Shakespeare's time • The entertainment world • The actors and their plays • The theaters • Presenting the plays The dramatic action Drama and the Shakespearean moment A Midsummer Night's Dream ...
... Theater in Shakespeare's time • The entertainment world • The actors and their plays • The theaters • Presenting the plays The dramatic action Drama and the Shakespearean moment A Midsummer Night's Dream ...
Strana 13
... dramatic action of the play. When we discuss Othello at length in Chapter 8, we'll spend time exploring it. But if you have any doubt about what I'm saying here, look at Iago's final line in the scene: “I am your own forever.” Not the ...
... dramatic action of the play. When we discuss Othello at length in Chapter 8, we'll spend time exploring it. But if you have any doubt about what I'm saying here, look at Iago's final line in the scene: “I am your own forever.” Not the ...
Strana 18
... dramatic action even as it provides the play's most hilarious moments. But now our focus is on what it tells us about the entertainment world of Elizabethan England, the world in which Shakespeare had begun to enjoy some success by 1592 ...
... dramatic action even as it provides the play's most hilarious moments. But now our focus is on what it tells us about the entertainment world of Elizabethan England, the world in which Shakespeare had begun to enjoy some success by 1592 ...
Strana 31
... dramatic action. For example, in the second scene of Hamlet, his mother asks him to “cast thy nighted color off,” and his reply contains references to his “inky cloak” and “customary suits of solemn black.” That Hamlet still wears ...
... dramatic action. For example, in the second scene of Hamlet, his mother asks him to “cast thy nighted color off,” and his reply contains references to his “inky cloak” and “customary suits of solemn black.” That Hamlet still wears ...
Strana 32
... plays, we shall see Cornwall tear out Gloucester's eyes (King Lear) and ... drama and only get reported to the audience usually are staged for Elizabethan ... Action is eloquence, and the eyes of th' ignorant More learned than the ears ...
... plays, we shall see Cornwall tear out Gloucester's eyes (King Lear) and ... drama and only get reported to the audience usually are staged for Elizabethan ... Action is eloquence, and the eyes of th' ignorant More learned than the ears ...
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Profoundly Entertaining: An Introduction to Shakespeare's Artistry Herbert B. Rothschild Náhled není k dispozici. - 2006 |
Profoundly Entertaining: An Introduction to Shakespeare's Artistry Herbert B. Rothschild Náhled není k dispozici. - 2006 |
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