Class and Society in ShakespeareBloomsbury Publishing, 2007年11月15日 - 608 頁 The Continuum Shakespeare Dictionaries provide authoritative yet accessible guides to the principal subject-areas covered by the plays and poetry of Shakespeare. The dictionaries provide readers with a comprehensive guide to the topic under discussion, its occurrence and significance in Shakespeare's works, and its contemporary meanings. Entries range from a few lines in length to mini-essays, providing the opportunity to explore an important literary or historical concept or idea in depth. Entries include: apothecary, bear-baiting, Caesar, degree, gentry, Henry V, kingdom, London, masque, nobility, plague, society, treason, usury, whore and youth. They follow an easy to use three-part structure: a general introduction to the term or topic; a survey of its significance and use in Shakespeare's plays and a guide to further reading. |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 66 筆
第 5 頁
... figures in this particular play, with Hamlet making sarcastic fun of Polonius while the older man struggles to deal both with Hamlet's madness, which is itself another form of acting, and his own attempts to describe 5 actor.
... figures in this particular play, with Hamlet making sarcastic fun of Polonius while the older man struggles to deal both with Hamlet's madness, which is itself another form of acting, and his own attempts to describe 5 actor.
第 15 頁
... figure throughout both of the Henry IV plays. He is a member of the important northern Scrope family, and tries to co-ordinate the various disaffected factions against the reign of a king seen by many to be a usurper. His political role ...
... figure throughout both of the Henry IV plays. He is a member of the important northern Scrope family, and tries to co-ordinate the various disaffected factions against the reign of a king seen by many to be a usurper. His political role ...
第 16 頁
... figure in the episodic play Henry VIII, known in the period as All Is True, very little of which is true at all. The play functions as a dramatic representation of the momentous events of Henry's reign up to the baptism of Princess ...
... figure in the episodic play Henry VIII, known in the period as All Is True, very little of which is true at all. The play functions as a dramatic representation of the momentous events of Henry's reign up to the baptism of Princess ...
第 17 頁
... figures at least as much as religious ones. The conflation of the two spheres picks up on a whole series of negotiations around the social meanings of religious power in the period. (c) See Hassel (2005), 23. Duffy (1992) has quite a ...
... figures at least as much as religious ones. The conflation of the two spheres picks up on a whole series of negotiations around the social meanings of religious power in the period. (c) See Hassel (2005), 23. Duffy (1992) has quite a ...
第 19 頁
... figure. The first, a rhetorical exaggeration, occurs at HV 2.0.1–4. The armourers are doing very well out of the preparations for war, but then their profession is an honourable one, unlike the supposedly low-life camp followers such as ...
... figure. The first, a rhetorical exaggeration, occurs at HV 2.0.1–4. The armourers are doing very well out of the preparations for war, but then their profession is an honourable one, unlike the supposedly low-life camp followers such as ...
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常見字詞
action appears army associated audience authority become beginning behaviour body Caesar comes common contemporary context course court crown deal death describes Duke Edward effect elements Elizabeth England English especially exactly example extremely fact famous father fighting figure force France French given gives Gloucester Henry VIII Henry’s honour House husband important issue Katherine of Aragon kind king king’s Lancaster later leads least logic Lord marriage married means military nature nobility noble notes occurs particularly perhaps period play political position possible Prince problem queen rank reason reference reign relation relatively religious Renaissance result rhetoric Richard Roman royal says scene seems sense Shakespeare similar simply situation social specific speech stage succession term thee thou throne usage usually various Wars whole woman women York young