Shakespeare's TragediesRoutledge, 11 okt 2013 - 280 pagina's First published in 1951. G B Harrison here recognizes that Shakespeare's tragedies were intended for performance in a theatre and that the playwright's conspicuous gift among his contemporaries was a sympathy for joy and sorrow, pity and terror, and right and wrong of his people. The plays covered are: Titus Andronicus, Romeo and Juliet, Julius Caesar, Hamlet, Troilus and Cressida, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth, Antony and Cleopatra, Coriolanus and Timon of Athens. |
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Pagina 5
... Shakespeare and his plays without vast obligation to those who have gone before him ; but such is the mass of Shakespearean criticism that it is impossible to acknow- ledge all one's debts , even where they are known . It seems best ...
... Shakespeare and his plays without vast obligation to those who have gone before him ; but such is the mass of Shakespearean criticism that it is impossible to acknow- ledge all one's debts , even where they are known . It seems best ...
Pagina 10
... Shakespeare and his plays , so that nowadays critics are less interested in Shakespeare's universal morality and more in his plays as expressions of his own times . At one extreme modern critics and scholars see Hamlet as Shakespeare's ...
... Shakespeare and his plays , so that nowadays critics are less interested in Shakespeare's universal morality and more in his plays as expressions of his own times . At one extreme modern critics and scholars see Hamlet as Shakespeare's ...
Pagina 11
... Shakespeare's plays . Of the man himself we know the facts of his life in considerable detail ; but of his personality little that can be certain , except from what is revealed in his work , and every interpreter gives a different ...
... Shakespeare's plays . Of the man himself we know the facts of his life in considerable detail ; but of his personality little that can be certain , except from what is revealed in his work , and every interpreter gives a different ...
Pagina 12
... Shakespeare took some interest . It needs less scholarship to understand how Shakespeare's plays were staged and acted . Even school texts nowadays contain a section of the Introduction describing , often with an illus- tration , the ...
... Shakespeare took some interest . It needs less scholarship to understand how Shakespeare's plays were staged and acted . Even school texts nowadays contain a section of the Introduction describing , often with an illus- tration , the ...
Pagina 14
... play in which mummers disguised themselves as goats , or a memorial drama played beside a dead hero's tomb . Our immediate concern is with two matters : what did the word mean to Shakespeare's con- temporaries , and what , if anything ...
... play in which mummers disguised themselves as goats , or a memorial drama played beside a dead hero's tomb . Our immediate concern is with two matters : what did the word mean to Shakespeare's con- temporaries , and what , if anything ...
Inhoudsopgave
9 | |
2 Titus Andronicus | 30 |
3 Romeo and Juliet | 47 |
4 Julius Caesar | 65 |
5 Hamlet | 88 |
6 Troylus and Cressida | 111 |
7 Othello | 131 |
8 King Lear | 158 |
9 Macbeth | 184 |
10 Antony and Cleopatra | 203 |
11 Coriolanus | 227 |
12 Timon of Athens | 253 |
Epilogue | 271 |
Index | 275 |
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Aaron Achilles Ajax Alcibiades Antony and Cleopatra Antony's Apemantus audience Aufidius Bassianus begins blood Brabantio Brutus Cassio character Claudius comes Cordelia Coriolanus critics curtains dead death deep tragedy Desdemona drama Edmund Elizabethan Emilia emotions Enobarbus enters episode eyes father feeling follows Friar friends give Gloucester Goneril Greek Hamlet hand hath heart Hector honour husband Iago Iago's inner stage Julius Caesar kill King Lady Capulet Laertes Lavinia Lear Lord Lucius Macbeth main stage Martius Menenius mind moral mother murder nature never night Octavius Othello Pandarus passes Patroclus Plutarch Queen realize Regan replies returns revenge Revenge Play Roderigo Roman Rome Romeo and Juliet Saturninus scene sense Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays soldier soliloquy Spanish Tragedy speak speech stage direction story Tamora thee Thersites thou Timon Titus Andronicus tragic tribunes Troylus and Cressida Tybalt Ulysses upper stage utter vengeance Volumnia wife words young