ShakespeareRoutledge, 11.10.2013 г. - 208 страници First published in 1951. |
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... psychological probabilities of real life, a man who reacted as Othello does to Iago's insinuations~so immediately, so passionately—would be a man naturally disposed to jealousy, which Othello is not. According to the psychological ...
... psychological developments in actual life. “The trouble with Shakespeare criticism,” says Stoll, again, “is that it has been prompted and guided by the spirit of literalism. The play has been thought to be a psychological document, not ...
... psychologically credible? But there is evidence in the play that Lodovico and the “full senate” were not altogether correct in their estimate of Othello. Iago was regarded in Venice as a man most conspicuous for honesty. At the very ...
... psychologically consistent before and after the beginning of the temptation. Professor Stoll deals with the Cassio-Montano affair, but he refuses to allow that it has any psychological significance. He says: “Here Othello, who hitherto ...
... psychological probability. But admittedly there is some psychological unrealism in the play. Iago professes a number of motives for his proceeding against Othello and Cassio. Among these motives is the fact that he suspects both of them ...
Съдържание
7 | |
9 | |
Chapter II Shakespeare and the OrderDisorder Antithesis | 39 |
Chapter III Comedy | 57 |
Chapter IV Imaginative Interpretation and Troilus and Cressida | 89 |
Chapter V History | 115 |
Chapter VI Tragedy | 157 |
Chapter VII The Last Plays | 188 |
Book List | 201 |
Index | 205 |