Shakespearean CriticismGale Research International, Limited, 1999 - 420 Seiten Presents literary criticism on the plays and poetry of Shakespeare. Critical essays are selected from leading sources, including journals, magazines, books, reviews, diaries, newspapers, pamphlets, and scholarly papers. Includes commentary by Shakespeare's contemporaries as well as a full range of views from later centuries, with an emphasis on contemporary analysis. Includes aesthetic criticism, textual criticism, and criticism of Shakespeare in performance. |
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Seite 216
... Caliban ; he can imagine blessings , but even in his dreams he is unable to receive them . The Caliban who begins to emerge is a being distress- ingly like the audience members . Like them , he has an acute sense of the gap between life ...
... Caliban ; he can imagine blessings , but even in his dreams he is unable to receive them . The Caliban who begins to emerge is a being distress- ingly like the audience members . Like them , he has an acute sense of the gap between life ...
Seite 222
... Caliban tried to violate her honor and Caliban's retort that had Prospero not prevented him , " I had peopled else This isle with Calibans " ( I.ii.349-50 ) . Despite the overwhelming evidence of Caliban's basic physiology , several ...
... Caliban tried to violate her honor and Caliban's retort that had Prospero not prevented him , " I had peopled else This isle with Calibans " ( I.ii.349-50 ) . Despite the overwhelming evidence of Caliban's basic physiology , several ...
Seite 223
... Caliban " cat " ( II.ii.70 ) , but the text itself and contemporaneous proverbs clearly link the epithet to alcohol's purported ability to make even a cat speak.2 27 Several times Caliban's parentage - his mother , Pro- spero tells us ...
... Caliban " cat " ( II.ii.70 ) , but the text itself and contemporaneous proverbs clearly link the epithet to alcohol's purported ability to make even a cat speak.2 27 Several times Caliban's parentage - his mother , Pro- spero tells us ...
Inhalt
Dreams in Shakespeare | 1 |
A Midsummer Nights Dream | 84 |
The Winters Tale | 295 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action Alonso Antonio appears Ariel audience Autolycus becomes Bohemia Bottom Caesar Caliban characters comedy comic critics cultural Cymbeline daughter death Demetrius desire dramatic Elizabethan essay experience eyes fairies fantasy father fear Ferdinand fiction figure Florizel Freud Gonzalo Hamlet hath Helena Hermia Hermione Hermione's Hippolyta human illusion imagination interpretation island king King Lear Lady language Lear Leontes London lovers Lysander Macbeth magic male Mamillius marriage masque means ment metaphor Midsummer Night's Dream mimetic mind Miranda mother murder Nashe's nature Neoplatonist Oberon Ovid Paulina Perdita play's plot Polixenes Portia Posthumus present Prospero psychoanalytic Puck Pyramus Queen reality Renaissance role Romeo says scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare significant sleep social speak speare's speech spirit stage Stephano Stephen Orgel strange suggests symbolic Tempest theatrical thee theme Theseus things thou tion Titania transformation Trinculo University Press vision wife Winter's Tale words