King LearBloom's Literary Criticism, 2008 - 356 pages This remarkable edition features a newly edited text of King Lear based on the earliest printed text of the play, along with detailed notes and performance annotations. An integrated audio CD showcases the deeper understanding and enjoyment from the power of performance.HearReadSee: -- Hear recordings of great contemporary and historical performances of key scenes from the play.-- Read about a modern production, from the director's point of view.-- See production notes and photos alongside the text that takes you inside the stage experience.-- See photos from contemporary stage productions and movie adaptations.-- Read and see how a modern cast approaches the play, from interviews with the actors.-- Hear and read about how a legendary voice coach (previously from the RSC) approaches the text and works with actors on Speaking Shakespeare.Narrated by Sir Derek JacobiText Editor: Douglas Brooks (Texas A&M) |
From inside the book
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Page 11
... feel what wretches feel , That thou mayst shake the superflux to them , And show the heavens more just . The justice of the heavens , Lear asserts , is contingent upon the just actions not of gods but of people : " Take physic , pomp ...
... feel what wretches feel , That thou mayst shake the superflux to them , And show the heavens more just . The justice of the heavens , Lear asserts , is contingent upon the just actions not of gods but of people : " Take physic , pomp ...
Page 37
... feel what wretches feel , That thou mayst shake the superflux to them , And show the heavens more just . Outside the hovel , Lear speaks to Kent of his mental turmoil . He explains that the storm outside is nothing compared to the storm ...
... feel what wretches feel , That thou mayst shake the superflux to them , And show the heavens more just . Outside the hovel , Lear speaks to Kent of his mental turmoil . He explains that the storm outside is nothing compared to the storm ...
Page 290
... feel dramatic sympathy where we don't necessarily feel moral sympathy . As for Lear and his dreary love test , it's true that Goneril and Regan are being hypocrites when they patter glibly through the declarations of love they are ...
... feel dramatic sympathy where we don't necessarily feel moral sympathy . As for Lear and his dreary love test , it's true that Goneril and Regan are being hypocrites when they patter glibly through the declarations of love they are ...
Contents
Summary of King Lear | 5 |
Key Passages in King Lear | 23 |
List of Characters in King Lear | 49 |
Copyright | |
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A. C. Bradley Albany audience bastard beasts blind century characters Christian Cordelia Cornwall creation cries critics curse Cymbeline dark daughters death divine drama Edgar Edmund elements evil ex nihilo eyes Falstaff father feel fiend Fool force Gloster Gloucester Gloucester's goddess gods Goneril and Regan Hamlet Harold Bloom heart heath heavens human Iago idol imagination ingratitude justice Kent kill kind King Lear kingdom Lear and Cordelia Lear's Leir live Macbeth madness man's means mind Montaigne moral Nahum Tate nature never night Northrop Frye Oswald Othello pagan passion persons pity play's poet poor rage says scene seems sense servant Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays sisters soul speak speech spirit stage storm story suffering tell tempest thee thing thou thought thunder Timon of Athens Tolstoy tragedy tragic transcendence Troilus and Cressida truth virtue vision wheel of fire words wretched