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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Philip Edwards. First published 1968 1968 Philip Edwards Printed in Great Britain by Butler & Tanner Ltd Frome and London Distributed in the USA by Barnes and Noble , Inc. Contents I The Contrary Valuations 2 The Sonnets to the.
Philip Edwards. First published 1968 1968 Philip Edwards Printed in Great Britain by Butler & Tanner Ltd Frome and London Distributed in the USA by Barnes and Noble , Inc. Contents I The Contrary Valuations 2 The Sonnets to the.
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Philip Edwards. Contents I The Contrary Valuations 2 The Sonnets to the Dark Woman 3 Love's Labour's Lost 4 The Abandon'd Cave 5 Romeo and Juliet 6 Hamlet 7 The Problem Plays ( i ) 8 The Problem Plays ( ii ) 9 The Jacobean Tragedies 10 ...
Philip Edwards. Contents I The Contrary Valuations 2 The Sonnets to the Dark Woman 3 Love's Labour's Lost 4 The Abandon'd Cave 5 Romeo and Juliet 6 Hamlet 7 The Problem Plays ( i ) 8 The Problem Plays ( ii ) 9 The Jacobean Tragedies 10 ...
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... valuation of everything we live through. A war, a family, an institution: work, play or sex; almost at the same moment, they mean everything and they mean very little. Things that are important and firm suddenly seem ridiculous and ...
... valuation of everything we live through. A war, a family, an institution: work, play or sex; almost at the same moment, they mean everything and they mean very little. Things that are important and firm suddenly seem ridiculous and ...
第 1 頁
Philip Edwards. I The Contrary Valuations If he outlived his Greek campaign , Byron said , he would write two poems on the subject : one an epic , the other a burlesque.1 We all understand him , because we all have the same double valuation ...
Philip Edwards. I The Contrary Valuations If he outlived his Greek campaign , Byron said , he would write two poems on the subject : one an epic , the other a burlesque.1 We all understand him , because we all have the same double valuation ...
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... simplifying the complex of experience and turning it into convenient patterns : if we cannot see that we are doing it ourselves , we can listen to the man next door putting himself in a good light as he recounts The Contrary Valuations 3.
... simplifying the complex of experience and turning it into convenient patterns : if we cannot see that we are doing it ourselves , we can listen to the man next door putting himself in a good light as he recounts The Contrary Valuations 3.
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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accept achieved action affection attempt audience beauty becomes beginning believe Berowne bring changed characters comedy comes continuous course created dark death desire divine Dream Duke experience eyes fact failure feel final follow force Friar give Hamlet hate heaven human idea imagination innocence Jaques killing kind king Lear lives Lost Love's lovers lust marriage meaning Measure Measure for Measure mind move nature never Night Othello pattern Pericles person play poem poet poetry possible present problem question reality reason relation Romeo and Juliet scene seems seen sense sequence sexual Shakespeare sonnets speak speech spirit stage story strange suggest surely Tale Tempest Theseus things thou thought Timon tragedy Troilus and Cressida true truth trying turn Ulysses wants whole wish woman writing