Shifting Perspectives and the Stylish Style: Mannerism in Shakespeare and His Jacobean ContemporariesUniversity of Toronto Press, 1988 - 227 pages |
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Page 63
... comedy , but such interjections , besides ' forestalling the plot , ' as Cordatus himself says to Mitis at one point , actually have the effect of so many lectures by the author as to how one might best interpret the play's action . The ...
... comedy , but such interjections , besides ' forestalling the plot , ' as Cordatus himself says to Mitis at one point , actually have the effect of so many lectures by the author as to how one might best interpret the play's action . The ...
Page 97
... comedy from the classical formulas of Plautus and Terence . The catharsis of sympathy and ridicule , the emotions which Frye says ( in the Anatomy of Criticism ) constitute the audience's response to comedy ( corresponding to the ...
... comedy from the classical formulas of Plautus and Terence . The catharsis of sympathy and ridicule , the emotions which Frye says ( in the Anatomy of Criticism ) constitute the audience's response to comedy ( corresponding to the ...
Page 99
... comedy ; nevertheless , it can be seen to be comedy with a few definite romantic marks , especially if we accept the full social implications of Helena's lowly birth , which reinforce the fairy - tale feeling of the drama's eventual ...
... comedy ; nevertheless , it can be seen to be comedy with a few definite romantic marks , especially if we accept the full social implications of Helena's lowly birth , which reinforce the fairy - tale feeling of the drama's eventual ...
Contents
CHAPTER I | 19 |
ON UNPREDICTABILITY AND NONCLASSICAL UNITY | 97 |
CHAPTER IV | 118 |
Copyright | |
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