William Shakespeare, King LearSusan Bruce Columbia University Press, 1998 - 192 Seiten This Critical Guide helps students sift through and make sense of nearly three centuries of Lear criticism, providing insight into different assessments of the play's merit and its place within Shakespeare's work and the canon of English literature. Highlights include excerpts from the neoclassical and Romantic receptions of King Lear -- material from John Dryden, Samuel Johnson, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Victor Hugo -- and a discussion of recent and current trends in criticism of the play. |
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Seite 5
... Scene where Lear either is with his Daughters or Discoursing of them . The Charms of the Sentiments , and Diction , are too numerous to come under the Observation of a single Paper ... Lewis Theobald , from The Censor , no.10 ( 2 May ...
... Scene where Lear either is with his Daughters or Discoursing of them . The Charms of the Sentiments , and Diction , are too numerous to come under the Observation of a single Paper ... Lewis Theobald , from The Censor , no.10 ( 2 May ...
Seite 6
... scene by scene . ] The second act [ of King Lear is ] full of unnatural events , and yet more unnatural speeches , not flowing from the position of the charac- ters , and finishing with a scene between Lear and his daughters which might ...
... scene by scene . ] The second act [ of King Lear is ] full of unnatural events , and yet more unnatural speeches , not flowing from the position of the charac- ters , and finishing with a scene between Lear and his daughters which might ...
Seite 7
... scene 3 , wherein is related to Kent Cordelia's reaction to the news of Lear's strife ( ' her smiles and tears / Were like , a better way ' ) appears only in the Quarto version . The last lines of the play are given to Edgar in the ...
... scene 3 , wherein is related to Kent Cordelia's reaction to the news of Lear's strife ( ' her smiles and tears / Were like , a better way ' ) appears only in the Quarto version . The last lines of the play are given to Edgar in the ...
Seite 9
... scene ' . " This seems to me , ' he goes on , ' a shorter and less ostentatious method of per- forming the better half of Criticism ( namely the pointing out an Author's excellencies ) than to fill a whole paper with citations of fine ...
... scene ' . " This seems to me , ' he goes on , ' a shorter and less ostentatious method of per- forming the better half of Criticism ( namely the pointing out an Author's excellencies ) than to fill a whole paper with citations of fine ...
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Inhalt
NeoClassicism | 15 |
Romanticism | 48 |
Realism | 83 |
From Christianity to Chaos | 116 |
Contemporary Criticism of King Lear | 149 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
A.C. Bradley action aesthetic argues attack audience blind Bradley Bradley's Brian Vickers century chapter character clown conception Coppélia Cordelia Cornwall daughters death Dickens Dover drama Edgar edition Edmund effect Empson essay express extract eyes father feeling feudal Foakes Fool Freud Garrick Gervinus Gloster Gloucester Gloucester's gods Goneril Guizot Hamlet heart historical Hugo human illusion Kent kind King Lear Kott L. C. Knights literary London mind moral motives nature Neo-Classical Orwell Oswald passion person play's poet poetic justice question reading of King reason renunciation representation represented reprinted role Romantic scene Schlegel seems sense Shakespeare Shakespeare Our Contemporary Shakespeare's plays Shakespearean tragedy social soul speak spectator speech stage suffering Swinburne Tate Tate's adaptation Tate's Lear theme theory thing thou tion Tolstoy Tolstoy's tragic unity universal Vickers Wheel of Fire whole William Shakespeare Wilson Knight women words writing