Rooted Sorrow: Dying in Early Modern EnglandFairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1994 - 296 pàgines This book is a literary and cultural study of death and dying through selected images, events, and words that intersect in expressive forms between 1590 and 1631. |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 77.
Pàgina 39
... audience.3 Par- ticularly important for the twentieth - century student of audience response is to identify key symbols such as the skull , skeleton , and deathbed in the great web of cultural tradition in the period and to trace the ...
... audience.3 Par- ticularly important for the twentieth - century student of audience response is to identify key symbols such as the skull , skeleton , and deathbed in the great web of cultural tradition in the period and to trace the ...
Pàgina 152
... audience to the same mercy that Desdemona herself has shown . The dominating theological implication , of course , is that God ( more merciful than any audience ) would accept Othello's judgment upon himself and grant him mercy . But ...
... audience to the same mercy that Desdemona herself has shown . The dominating theological implication , of course , is that God ( more merciful than any audience ) would accept Othello's judgment upon himself and grant him mercy . But ...
Pàgina 168
... audience . When Lear brings in Cordelia dead , any audience must feel that too late the change of heart comes . When we turn to Lear himself , the death of Cordelia seems still to be a major stumbling block to the more affirmative ...
... audience . When Lear brings in Cordelia dead , any audience must feel that too late the change of heart comes . When we turn to Lear himself , the death of Cordelia seems still to be a major stumbling block to the more affirmative ...
Continguts
Preface | 11 |
Cultural Poetics and Notes on an Approach | 17 |
Skull Skeleton | 37 |
Copyright | |
No s’hi han mostrat 13 seccions
Frases i termes més freqüents
allegory Angel Anglican art of dying attitudes biblical Christ Christian comfort commonplace Communion Communion of Saints context conventions culture damnation Dance of Death demons devil devotional tradition divine Donne's dramatic early seventeenth century elaborate elegy Elizabeth Elizabethan England English Essex evil example experience expression faith fear final friends God's grief heaven human imagery inspiration Jacobean John Donne King King Lear lament Last Judgment Lear literary literature London Macbeth Magdalen major medieval meditation mercy metaphor Milton modern moriendi moriendi tradition moriens mourning moves Othello Oxford paradoxical perhaps period Perkins play poems poetic popular prayer preacher Queen reader reconciliation redemptive religious Renaissance Richard Richard III ritual saints Satan scene scholars sense seventeenth century Shakespeare's audience Sicke sins sixteenth century sorrow soul spiritual structure suggests suicide symbolic temptation to despair theme theological thou tion University Press visual woodcut Zachary Boyd
Referències a aquest llibre
Women, Death and Literature in Post-Reformation England Patricia Phillippy Previsualització no disponible - 2002 |