Shakespeare's Tragic Sequence

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Psychology Press, 2005 - 207 頁

First published in 1972.

The emphasis of this book is that each of Shakespeare's tragedies demanded its own individual form and that although certain themes run through most of the tragedies, nearly all critics refrain from the attempt to apply external rules to them. The plays are almost always concerned with one person; they end with the death of the hero; the suffering and calamity that befall him are exceptional; and the tragedies include the medieval idea of the reversal of fortune.

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Preface
9
Apprenticeship
20
Julius Caesar
42
Hamlet
55
Othello
93
King Lear
117
Macbeth
142
Antony and Cleopatra
156
Coriolanus
172
ΙΟ Timon of Athens
187
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