Shakespeare and Cognition: Aristotle's Legacy and Shakespearean DramaRoutledge, 2013年10月31日 - 224页 Shakespeare and Cognition examines the essential relationship between vision, knowledge, and memory in Renaissance models of cognition as seen in Shakespeare's plays. Drawing on both Aristotle's Metaphysics and contemporary cognitive literary theory, Arthur F. Kinney explores five key objects/images in Shakespeare's plays – crowns, bells, rings, graves and ghosts – that are not actually seen (or, in the case of the latter, not meant to be seen), but are central to the imagination of both the playwright and the playgoers. |
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共有 29 个结果,这是第 1-5 个
第xi页
... man's primary way of understanding, the most important of his five senses. The eye perceives objects through patterns of reflected light that enter the eyes through the pupils, are gathered by the lens, and thrown onto the retina, a ...
... man's primary way of understanding, the most important of his five senses. The eye perceives objects through patterns of reflected light that enter the eyes through the pupils, are gathered by the lens, and thrown onto the retina, a ...
第1页
... man's essential characteristic but precisely that which sets him apart from all other terrestrial beings. It is also what in turn makes philosophy—the study of knowing and of knowledge—man's primary intellectual endeavor. Man's unique ...
... man's essential characteristic but precisely that which sets him apart from all other terrestrial beings. It is also what in turn makes philosophy—the study of knowing and of knowledge—man's primary intellectual endeavor. Man's unique ...
第2页
... man on his intellectual journey toward under- standing the natural and supernatural worlds, the world of man and the ... man's peculiar task, is possible only through such perception, as Aristotle makes clear later on in the Metaphysics ...
... man on his intellectual journey toward under- standing the natural and supernatural worlds, the world of man and the ... man's peculiar task, is possible only through such perception, as Aristotle makes clear later on in the Metaphysics ...
第27页
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目录
1 | |
Shakespeares Crowns | 25 |
Shakespeares Rings | 51 |
Shakespeares Bells | 77 |
Shakespeares Wills | 101 |
Shakespeares Legacy | 129 |
Notes | 133 |
Bibliography | 145 |
Index | 161 |
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常见术语和短语
All’s amygdala Antony Aristotle Aristotle’s Bassanio Bertram betrothal Bevington brain Brutus burial Cambridge University Press Casca Cassius Christopher Marlowe’s church cognitive coronet court Cressy daughter David Cressy dead death diadem Early Modern Elizabeth England English father Figure gift give gold hath heir Helena Henry Honigmann and Brock images inheritance James James’s Jessica John Julius Caesar King King’s Leah Leah’s ring Lear legacy London Lord Macbeth man’s marriage married memory Merchant of Venice mind’s eye mourning Narbon neurons o’er Othello Oxford University Press parish passing bell play’s playgoers Plutarch Portia posies Queen Quoted by Cressy Ratney Renaissance Drama Richard Richard II Routledge says scene sense Shakespeare Apocrypha Shakespeare’s Shylock sight Sokol sound stage properties Tamburlaine tells thee Thomas Thomas Heywood Thomas Middleton thornes thou thought tion Titus Andronicus tolled Tubal Tudor turquoise V.S. Ramachandran visual W.W. Norton ward wardship wedding ring wife William York