The Secret Cause: A Discussion of TragedyUniversity of Massachusetts Press, 1981 - 189 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 33.
Pàgina 62
... audience as potent a manifestation of necessity as the Delphic oracle for the Greek audience . O'Neill in Desire makes it a believable determinism in terms of tragic action and a dark comment on man's plight . Man and woman can , like ...
... audience as potent a manifestation of necessity as the Delphic oracle for the Greek audience . O'Neill in Desire makes it a believable determinism in terms of tragic action and a dark comment on man's plight . Man and woman can , like ...
Pàgina 81
... audience witnesses no forceful sequence of narrative , since the story is known and therefore already solidified in the audience's mind . One could say that the audience is given not sequence but status quo , and status quo points to a ...
... audience witnesses no forceful sequence of narrative , since the story is known and therefore already solidified in the audience's mind . One could say that the audience is given not sequence but status quo , and status quo points to a ...
Pàgina 85
... audience to take the kind of stance often associated with satire . And yet , Stoppard's play cannot be called satirical , for it makes no attempt to encourage the audience into any kind of action , as do Brecht's plays , or to cause the ...
... audience to take the kind of stance often associated with satire . And yet , Stoppard's play cannot be called satirical , for it makes no attempt to encourage the audience into any kind of action , as do Brecht's plays , or to cause the ...
Continguts
Sophocles Antigone and Anouilhs Antigone | 11 |
Hippolytus Phaedra Desire Under the Elms | 33 |
Hamlet and Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead | 65 |
Copyright | |
No s’hi han mostrat 5 seccions
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Frases i termes més freqüents
Abbie abyss action Aeschylus Anouilh answer Antigone Antigone's Aphrodite audience Bartley Beckett boundary situation Captain America character Chekhov chorus Claire Zachanassian comedy condition confrontation Creon critics dark death desire destiny Didi and Gogo Dionysus discussion drama dramatist Dürrenmatt Easy Rider Eben Eben's Elms Ephraim Eugene O'Neill Euripides fate father feel forces goddess gods Greek Guildenstern Are Dead guilt Hamlet heart Hilda Hippolytus human Ibsen Irina Ismene kill King Lear lives man's Master Builder Maurya modern mortal mother mystery myth nature never O'Neill Oedipus Rex passion past Phaedra physical play play's beginning Polyneices present prods Prometheus question mark Racine realizes reveals revenge Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Salesman scene secret cause seems sexual Shakespeare shout Solness Solness's Sophocles speech stage Stoppard's story suffering tells terror Theseus Three Sisters tion trag tragedy tragic tragicomedy victim Waiting for Godot Willy Willy's witness words York young Zeus