A Handbook of Critical Approaches to LiteratureHarper & Row, 1966 - 238 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 46.
Pàgina 157
... theme of honor in Henry IV , Part One , is evident in explicit statements by a melodramatic Hotspur ( I , iii ; V , iv ) and by a no - nonsense , pragmatic Falstaff ( V , i ; V , iii ) ; in the regal demeanor and haughty tone of King ...
... theme of honor in Henry IV , Part One , is evident in explicit statements by a melodramatic Hotspur ( I , iii ; V , iv ) and by a no - nonsense , pragmatic Falstaff ( V , i ; V , iii ) ; in the regal demeanor and haughty tone of King ...
Pàgina 160
... theme is not uncommon , nor is the theme of seduction . What gives the poem unusual power , how- ever , is the overbearing sense of a cold , calculated drive to use the pleasures of sex to counterbalance the threats of empty eternity ...
... theme is not uncommon , nor is the theme of seduction . What gives the poem unusual power , how- ever , is the overbearing sense of a cold , calculated drive to use the pleasures of sex to counterbalance the threats of empty eternity ...
Pàgina 173
... themes for himself , for each of them has its exponents . Each provides clues that enable the reader to delve deeper and deeper into a given theme and to see the relationship between one theme and another . No matter how widely any one ...
... themes for himself , for each of them has its exponents . Each provides clues that enable the reader to delve deeper and deeper into a given theme and to see the relationship between one theme and another . No matter how widely any one ...
Continguts
TRADITIONAL APPROACHES | 1 |
TRADITIONAL APPROACHES TO MARVELLS | 10 |
TRADITIONAL APPROACHES TO Hamlet | 16 |
Copyright | |
No s’hi han mostrat 14 seccions
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Frases i termes més freqüents
action American analysis appears approach archetypal become beginning called chapter characters classic Claudius complex concerned consider course criticism dark death devil drama dream effect Elizabethan evil example experience exponents fact Faith father fiction figure final follow forces forest Freudian given gives Hamlet hand Hawthorne hope Huck Huckleberry Finn human idea imagery images important interpretation journey kind King least lines literary literature living look meaning mind moral mother motif mystery myth nature night novel object pattern perhaps person play poem poetry possible present psychological questions reader reality reason river says seems seen sense sexual Shakespeare's short society speaker specific stanza story student suggest symbol theme theory thing thought tion traditional tragedy turn unconscious University village Young Goodman Brown