Shakespearean Language: A Guide for Actors and StudentsBloomsbury Academic, 2002 - 269 頁 Shakespeare was a master of language, his sayings have become part of everyday speech, and his plays endure, in part, because of the beauty of his verse. Shakespeare's language, however, poses special difficulties for modern actors because many of his words seem unusual or difficult to pronounce, he employs rhetorical devices throughout his works, and he carefully uses rhythm to convey sense. |
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... speaking were praised for their abil- ity to find the operatic scale of the passions and the language ; in reaction to lesser talents who produced the sound and fury only , the pendulum has swung quite far in the direction of unforced ...
... speaking the lines in a mental and physical state that is entirely open to the subliminal messages their hard work has trained them to hear . Speak Aloud The first strategy is a simple one . These words were written to be spoken aloud ...
... speaking aloud of Shakespeare's poetry and prose . Our goal is to find the rhetorical devices familiar to our experience of speak- ing them . We don't want to understand them , or label them , or analyze them . We want them to form ...