Russian Essays on Shakespeare and His Contemporaries

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Aleksandr Tikhonovich Parfenov, Joseph G. Price
University of Delaware Press, 1998 - 209 pages
In explaining the plays of Shakespeare to the audiences and readers of the former Soviet Union, the editors chose essays they thought were significant, in light of the historical and cultural perspectives they contained. These perspectives are felt necessary for a complete understanding of Shakespeare's plays by the modern reader. The outward-directed essays help explain the origins of Shakespeare's importance to Russian theater and literature in the nineteenth century, as well as his pervasive influence through decades of communism.
 

Contents

The Synthesis of Genres in Shakespeares Plays
19
The Tragic in Shakespeares Works
38
NineteenthCentury Attitudes
78
Three Shakespearean Stories in Nineteenth Century Russia
97
Shakespeare and the Advent of Modern Prose
113
On the Typology of Contemporary Shakespearean Production
127
Metamorphoses Theatricality
133
A New Dating for Shakespeares The Phoenix and the Turtle and the Identification of Its Protagonists
146
The Pastoral in Marlowe Raleigh Shakespeare and Donne
185
List of Contributors
201
Index
204
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Page 26 - If I do prove her haggard, Though that her jesses were my dear heart-strings, I'd whistle her off, and let her down the wind, To prey at fortune.

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