Fated Sky: The Femina Furens in ShakespeareUniversity of Delaware Press, 2000 - 174 pàgines The ensuing chapters extend the idea by explaining the centrality of John Studley's Medea to Shakespeare's conception of Joan la Pucelle (1 Henry V), Margaret of Anjou (2 Henry VI, 3 Henry VI, Richard III), and Tamora (Titus Andronicus); the further transformations of femina furens in The Taming of the Shrew and The Merchant of Venice; the strange parallels between Helena (All's Well that Ends Well) and John Studley's Phaedra; and between Cleopatra and Jasper Heywood's Juno. The last chapter suggests that Imogen and Cymbeline's Queen represent an exorcism of femina furens."--Jacket. |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 5 de 28.
Pàgina 18
... heart into her mouth and knows that nothing will come of nothing . One could equate Antigone and Cordelia , but the latter , like her creator , does more with less . The Newtonian intertext manifests itself elsewhere in Lear . Oedipus ...
... heart into her mouth and knows that nothing will come of nothing . One could equate Antigone and Cordelia , but the latter , like her creator , does more with less . The Newtonian intertext manifests itself elsewhere in Lear . Oedipus ...
Pàgina 36
... heart be bolde " ( Hip 63v ) defines her in her nefarious if understandable designs upon Hippolytus just as Andromacha's rueful " Why do I ... So great thinges wish ? " for the restoration of Troy ( TV 108v ) epitomizes her . Or Hecuba ...
... heart be bolde " ( Hip 63v ) defines her in her nefarious if understandable designs upon Hippolytus just as Andromacha's rueful " Why do I ... So great thinges wish ? " for the restoration of Troy ( TV 108v ) epitomizes her . Or Hecuba ...
Pàgina 37
... heart of tragedy in performance . " 42 Senecan sententiae , generally fatalis- tic , bespeak the play as well as the characters who utter them , such as Phaedra's " From him that wisheth Death , / Death neuer can be separate " ( Hip 68r ) ...
... heart of tragedy in performance . " 42 Senecan sententiae , generally fatalis- tic , bespeak the play as well as the characters who utter them , such as Phaedra's " From him that wisheth Death , / Death neuer can be separate " ( Hip 68r ) ...
Pàgina 54
Heu assolit el vostre límit de visualització per a aquest llibre.
Heu assolit el vostre límit de visualització per a aquest llibre.
Pàgina 55
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Heu assolit el vostre límit de visualització per a aquest llibre.
Continguts
24 | |
40 | |
I Will Be Angry | 61 |
I His Despightfull luno | 77 |
I Will Be Even with Thee | 95 |
Most Cruel to Herself | 112 |
Fierce Abridgements | 127 |
Notes | 130 |
Bibliography | 156 |
Index | 172 |
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Passatges populars
Pàgina 56 - of Burgundy: Look on thy Country, look on fertile France, And see the Cities and the Townes defac't, By wasting Ruine of the cruell Foe, As lookes the Mother on her lowly Babe, When Death doth close his tender-dying Eyes. See, see the pining Maladie of France: Behold the Wounds, the most
Pàgina 93 - Who euer shoots at him, I set him there. Who euer charges on his forward brest I am the Caitiffe that do hold him too't, And though I kill him not, I am the cause His death was so effected (3.2.112-16;
Pàgina 116 - Could I finde out The womans part in me, for there's no motion That tends to vice in man, but I affirme It is the Womans part: be it Lying, note it, The womans: Flattering, hers; Deceiuing, hers:
Pàgina 59 - First let me tell you whom you have condemn'd: Not me, begotten of a Shepheard Swaine, But issued from the Progeny of Kings. Vertuous and Holy, chosen from aboue, By inspiration of Celestial Grace, To worke exceeding myracles on earth.
Pàgina 75 - I may neither choose whom I would, nor refuse whom I dislike, so is the wil of a liuing daughter curb'd by the will of a dead father
Pàgina 43 - But burning fatall to the Talbonites. Bastard: See noble Charles the Beacon of our friend, The burning Torch in yonder Turret stands. Charles: Now shine it like a Commet of