Change of Mind in Greek TragedyVandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1995 - 286 頁 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 67 筆
第 38 頁
... audiences to seek focus and the dramatist's understanding of how to work with an audience's habits ) . Even without pretending fully to understand the psychology of the audience , we may draw some consequences of focus for the study of ...
... audiences to seek focus and the dramatist's understanding of how to work with an audience's habits ) . Even without pretending fully to understand the psychology of the audience , we may draw some consequences of focus for the study of ...
第 39 頁
... audience may respond by feeling that it should not have been so and drawing a contrary " lesson . " Conversely , an audience may feel an impulse to admire action which conflicts with some aspect of traditional morality but do nothing to ...
... audience may respond by feeling that it should not have been so and drawing a contrary " lesson . " Conversely , an audience may feel an impulse to admire action which conflicts with some aspect of traditional morality but do nothing to ...
第 50 頁
... audience to some emotional response or other.71 For a long time , the best contributions to the study of characterization have been insisting that it is vain to isolate character , plot , language , significant action , meaning ...
... audience to some emotional response or other.71 For a long time , the best contributions to the study of characterization have been insisting that it is vain to isolate character , plot , language , significant action , meaning ...
常見字詞
Achilles action Admetus Aeschylus Agamemnon Ajax Alcestis Antigone Apollo argument Aristotelian Aristotle Athenian Athens audience avoid believe Blundell Burnett change of mind chapter character characterization chorus Clytemnestra conflict context Creon Creusa criticism death deception decision Deianeira Dionysus discussion divine dramatic earlier Electra Erinyes Euripidean Euripides example fact father finally focus Funke further Greek tragedy Hecuba Helen Heracles heroic temper Hippolytus intentions interpretation intrigue Ion's Iphigenia in Aulis issue Knox later Lesky lines marriage meaning Medea Menelaus metaphor monody moral motif motivation move Neoptolemus occur Odysseus Oedipus Orestes passage patterns persuasion Phaedra Philoctetes play play's plot possible prologue psychological question reluctance remains response reveal reversal rhetorical sacrifice says scene secret seems situation Sophoclean Hero Sophocles speak speech stage stasimon suggest suicide Taplin technique Tecmessa thematic theme Theseus Tiresias tradition tragic words Xuthus Yunis Zeus γὰρ δὲ καὶ κακῶν τὸ