Shakespeare and the Confines of ArtRoutledge, 2013年10月11日 - 184 頁 First published in 1968. By selective study of certain of the comedies, tragedies and sonnets, Philip Edwards views Shakespeare's work as a whole and explains why his art developed as it did. The work which the author sees Shakespeare striving to create is the perfect fusion of comedy and tragedy and he suggests that we are watching the progress of a mind as acutely conscious as anyone today of the disorder and lack of meaning in the world. Nevertheless, it remains faithful to the possibility that within the imaginable forms of drama there exists that play which will satisfy the basic human need for reassurance, order and control. |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 26 筆
第 2 頁
... reality ' is clearly for Bacon a much more responsible work than the activity of the poetic imagination . Poetry , he tells us later , ' is rather a pleasure or play of imagination , than a work or duty thereof ' . The contempt for ...
... reality ' is clearly for Bacon a much more responsible work than the activity of the poetic imagination . Poetry , he tells us later , ' is rather a pleasure or play of imagination , than a work or duty thereof ' . The contempt for ...
第 8 頁
... reality ; he thought that to try to escape from it was to embrace delusion - ' creaming off nature , leaving the sour and the dregs for philosophy and reason to lap up ' . If we take an examination of what is generally understood by ...
... reality ; he thought that to try to escape from it was to embrace delusion - ' creaming off nature , leaving the sour and the dregs for philosophy and reason to lap up ' . If we take an examination of what is generally understood by ...
第 9 頁
... reality which art presents ; the third is ' the nature of things ' . Bacon claims that , without art , man can learn the nature of things and it will be different from the compensatory images of art . Plato will also have an alternative ...
... reality which art presents ; the third is ' the nature of things ' . Bacon claims that , without art , man can learn the nature of things and it will be different from the compensatory images of art . Plato will also have an alternative ...
第 13 頁
... of comedy to give : but it may seem to its author a facile fiction when he thinks of the reality of the difficulties he has allowed his characters to triumph over . The bitterness of a tragedy may be The Contrary Valuations 13.
... of comedy to give : but it may seem to its author a facile fiction when he thinks of the reality of the difficulties he has allowed his characters to triumph over . The bitterness of a tragedy may be The Contrary Valuations 13.
第 14 頁
... realities of malice and lust would be woven into a fabric which satisfies the strongest urge in our blood , the urge towards unity and integration . This is really to say that his efforts take the form of trying to merge comedy and ...
... realities of malice and lust would be woven into a fabric which satisfies the strongest urge in our blood , the urge towards unity and integration . This is really to say that his efforts take the form of trying to merge comedy and ...
內容
1 | |
17 | |
Loves Labours Lost | 33 |
The Abandond Cave | 49 |
Romeo and Juliet | 71 |
Hamlet | 83 |
The Problem Plays i | 95 |
The Problem Plays ii | 109 |
The Jacobean Tragedies | 121 |
Last Plays | 139 |
Conclusion | 161 |
Notes | 163 |
Index | 168 |
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