Shakespeare's Webs: Networks of Meaning in Renaissance DramaRoutledge, 2012年12月6日 - 192页 In this book, renowned Renaissance drama critic Arthur F. Kinney argues that Shakespeare's method of composing plays through networks of meanings can be seen as a harbinger of today's information technology. Drawing upon hypertext and cognitive theory--areas that have for some time promised to take on more importance in the sphere of Shakespeare Studies--as well as the central metaphor of the Routledge collection The Renaissance Computer, Kinney looks in detail at four objects/images in Shakespeare's plays--mirrors, maps, clocks, and books--and explores the ways in which they make up networks of meaning within single plays and across the dramatist's body of work that anticipate in some ways the networks of meaning or "information" now possible in the computer age. |
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共有 27 个结果,这是第 6-10 个
第xiv页
... objects and ideas, “material ecologies and...cultural systems of meaning,” he says, semiosis “is making something meaningful by seeing it as a part of some wholes rather than others, as being an alternative to some options rather than ...
... objects and ideas, “material ecologies and...cultural systems of meaning,” he says, semiosis “is making something meaningful by seeing it as a part of some wholes rather than others, as being an alternative to some options rather than ...
第xv页
... objects, but rather a process that involves activating many linked sub-processes that are themselves composed internally of the activation of links” (p. 45, italics mine). Such patterns remain only so long as they make sense of ...
... objects, but rather a process that involves activating many linked sub-processes that are themselves composed internally of the activation of links” (p. 45, italics mine). Such patterns remain only so long as they make sense of ...
第xix页
... object necessarily raising issues of cognition. But as the Canadian psychologist Donald Hebb suggested, learning and thought depend on the activity between neurons: if two neurons are active together, one firing the other, their ...
... object necessarily raising issues of cognition. But as the Canadian psychologist Donald Hebb suggested, learning and thought depend on the activity between neurons: if two neurons are active together, one firing the other, their ...
第xx页
... objects in dramatic performances—such as Lear's map. Interpretation, conceptualization, and thought thus have a biological basis in the chemical operations of the brain, but this is not the only biological process involved in cognitive ...
... objects in dramatic performances—such as Lear's map. Interpretation, conceptualization, and thought thus have a biological basis in the chemical operations of the brain, but this is not the only biological process involved in cognitive ...
第xxiii页
... object, and by the horizon of interpretations [to which we should add the horizon of expectations] available to historically situated spectators at a given time.... Invisible on the page except as textual signifiers, props seduce our ...
... object, and by the horizon of interpretations [to which we should add the horizon of expectations] available to historically situated spectators at a given time.... Invisible on the page except as textual signifiers, props seduce our ...
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常见术语和短语
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