Coming of Age in ShakespeareMethuen, 1981 - 248 pages **** Reprint of the 1981 edition (which is cited in BCL3). Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR |
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Page 233
... tragedy , for whom , as for Lear , the experience of the play is also the experience of learning to die . By expanding our perspective we can see that these deaths , too , bring about a change , a new access of under- standing . But in ...
... tragedy , for whom , as for Lear , the experience of the play is also the experience of learning to die . By expanding our perspective we can see that these deaths , too , bring about a change , a new access of under- standing . But in ...
Page 237
... Tragedy of Hamlet , Prince of Den- mark , in this catalogue of catastrophes ? Horatio , who cautions against considering too curiously , is himself a curious figure for the role of amanuensis ; there are parts of Hamlet - and therefore ...
... Tragedy of Hamlet , Prince of Den- mark , in this catalogue of catastrophes ? Horatio , who cautions against considering too curiously , is himself a curious figure for the role of amanuensis ; there are parts of Hamlet - and therefore ...
Page 240
... tragedy there is no such moment , suspended between ' fiction ' and ' reality ' , in which the protagonist may reveal himself , and the charm dissolve apace - nor , significantly , is there an explicit clarification and release , as ...
... tragedy there is no such moment , suspended between ' fiction ' and ' reality ' , in which the protagonist may reveal himself , and the charm dissolve apace - nor , significantly , is there an explicit clarification and release , as ...
Contents
SEPARATION AND INDIVIDUATION | 30 |
NOMINATION AND ELECTION | 52 |
PLAIN SPEAKING | 80 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
acceptance action Antony appears audience bear becomes begins brother Brutus Caesar characters child choice Claudio close comes comparison contrast Coriolanus course daughter dead death described effect example face fact father figures final followed give glass Hamlet hand hear Henry Hero human husband identity individual initiation Juliet kind king Lady language live look lost lovers Macbeth marriage married maturity means Measure metaphor mind mirror mother nature never night observed offers once passage pattern perhaps plain play present Press Prince rhetoric Richard ring rites ritual role Romeo says scene seems seen sense separation sexual Shakespeare's similar social society soliloquy speak speech stage suggests symbolic tell thee thing thou tion tragedy truth turn twinned virginity wife woman women York young