Julius CaesarPenguin UK, 07.04.2005 - 272 Seiten 'Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war, |
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... reference to him in print, in Robert Greene's pamphlet Greene's Groatsworth of Wit of 1592, parodies a line from Henry VI, Part III, implying that Shakespeare was already an established playwright. It seems likely that at some unknown ...
... references. That may seem a surprising assertion given that the play is often said to be rather slapdash in the way it creates and maintains its period setting. In contrast with the historically erudite and heavily footnoted Roman ...
... reference to the contemporary Rome of the Catholic Church provides some kind of key to a topical layer of meaning now lost to us. On the contrary, I suggest that to search for such topicality is to obscure the play's real concerns with ...
... reference, which establishes cultural distance, there is also the way the dialogue sets the scene allusions to with ... references to statues than any other in the Shakespeare canon, including the three other Roman plays. There is ...
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