Shakespeare: The Invention of the HumanRiverhead Books, 1998 - 745 pàgines "Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human" is the culmination of Harold Bloom's life's work in reading, writing about, and teaching Shakespeare. It is his passionate and convincing analysis of the way in which Shakespeare not merely represented human nature as we know it today, but actually created it: before Shakespeare, there was characterization; after Shakespeare, there was character, men and women with highly individual personalities -- Hamlet, Falstaff, Iago, Cleopatra, Macbeth, Rosalind, and Lear, among them. In making his argument, Bloom leads us through a brilliant and comprehensive reading of every one of Shakespeare's plays. According to a "New York Times" report on Shakespeare last year, "more people are watching him, reading him, and studying him than ever before." "Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human" is a landmark contribution, a book that will be celebrated and read for many years to come. It explains why Shakespeare has remained our most popular playwright for more than four hundred years, and in helping us to understand ourselves through literature, it restores the role of critic to one of central importance to our culture. |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 67.
Pàgina 102
... dark and dark our woes . [ III.v. 1–36 ] Exquisite in itself , this is also a subtle epitome of the tragedy of this tragedy , for the entire play could be regarded as a dawn song that , alas , is out of phase . A bemused audience ...
... dark and dark our woes . [ III.v. 1–36 ] Exquisite in itself , this is also a subtle epitome of the tragedy of this tragedy , for the entire play could be regarded as a dawn song that , alas , is out of phase . A bemused audience ...
Pàgina 243
... dark . Clown . Madman , thou errest . I say there is no darkness but ignorance , in which thou art more puzzled than the Egyptians in their fog . Mal . I say this house is as dark as ignorance , though ignorance were as dark as hell ...
... dark . Clown . Madman , thou errest . I say there is no darkness but ignorance , in which thou art more puzzled than the Egyptians in their fog . Mal . I say this house is as dark as ignorance , though ignorance were as dark as hell ...
Pàgina 354
... dark , that helps bring about a rancid resolution , both here and in Measure for Measure . The sportive formula in the dark they are all alike - is partly Shakespeare's satire upon the male propensity scarcely to distinguish one woman ...
... dark , that helps bring about a rancid resolution , both here and in Measure for Measure . The sportive formula in the dark they are all alike - is partly Shakespeare's satire upon the male propensity scarcely to distinguish one woman ...
Continguts
Shakespeares Universalism | 1 |
The Comedy of Errors | 21 |
The Taming of the Shrew | 28 |
Copyright | |
No s’hi han mostrat 30 seccions
Frases i termes més freqüents
allows Antony audience authority become begins believe better Caesar character Christian Cleopatra comedy comes comic consciousness critics dark dead death drama Dream Edgar effect eyes fall Falstaff father fear figure final Fool give Hamlet hath hear heart Henry human imagination invention irony John Jonson keep kind King Lear Lady lago lago's language Lear's least less lines live lord lost Macbeth madness Marlowe matter means Measure mode moral murder nature never night once Othello outrageous performance perhaps personality play play's possible Prince Prospero question remains Richard role Rosalind scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare Shylock speak speare speech spirit stage suggest tell thee thing thou thought tragedy transcends Troilus true turn women wonder