Shakespeare's Rhetoric of Comic CharacterRoutledge, 11.10.2013 г. - 168 страници First published in 1985. In this revisionist history of comic characterization, Karen Newman argues that, contrary to received opinion, Shakespeare was not the first comic dramatist to create self-conscious characters who seem 'lifelike' or 'realistic'. His comic practice is firmly set within a comic tradition which stretches from Plautus and Menander to playwrights of the Italian Renaissance. |
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Страница viii
... Italian Renaissance comedy and its relationships with Elizabethan drama; to W. S. Anderson, whose early course on Virgil prompted me to pursue the classics; to Barbara Lewalski and Walter Cohen who read my manuscript and made many ...
... Italian Renaissance comedy and its relationships with Elizabethan drama; to W. S. Anderson, whose early course on Virgil prompted me to pursue the classics; to Barbara Lewalski and Walter Cohen who read my manuscript and made many ...
Страница 1
... comedy between character and convention. Why, we ask, in the midst of the wonderful coincidences and arbitrary improbabilities of plot, the inherited paradigms of classical and Italian comedy, do we leave the theatre or study assured ...
... comedy between character and convention. Why, we ask, in the midst of the wonderful coincidences and arbitrary improbabilities of plot, the inherited paradigms of classical and Italian comedy, do we leave the theatre or study assured ...
Страница 5
... comic practice in a larger historical frame. In his excellent book, Shakespeare and the Traditions of Comedy, L. G. Salingar claims that Shakespeare's characters, unlike those of classical and Italian comedy, possess the 'quality of an ...
... comic practice in a larger historical frame. In his excellent book, Shakespeare and the Traditions of Comedy, L. G. Salingar claims that Shakespeare's characters, unlike those of classical and Italian comedy, possess the 'quality of an ...
Страница 56
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Страница 58
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Съдържание
1 | |
7 | |
2 Comic plot conventions in Measure for Measure | 20 |
3 Menander and New Comedy | 30 |
4 Plautus and Terence | 42 |
5 The enchantments of Circe | 57 |
Shakespeares early comedies | 77 |
As You Like It and Twelfth Night | 94 |
8 Mistaking in Much Ado | 109 |
9 Shakespeares rhetoric of consciousness | 121 |
Notes | 129 |
Index of plays discussed | 149 |
General index | 151 |
Други издания - Преглед на всички
Shakespeare's Rhetoric of Comic Character: Dramatic Convention in Classical ... Karen Newman Ограничен достъп - 2005 |
Често срещани думи и фрази
action Angelo Angelo’s soliloquy Antipholus of Syracuse Arden edition argues audience Beatrice behavior Benedick Berowne Cesario characterization Charisios Claudio Comedy of Errors comic characters comic plots comic soliloquy complex conventions courtly creating critics discovery disguise dramatic dramatists Drusilla Duke Duke’s E. M. W. Tillyard Elizabethan emphasize essay Evanthius example features of dialogue fiction Flamminio Gl’Ingannati Hamlet Hero Hero’s imagined inner debate intrigue Isabella Italian comedy Knemon language Lelia lifelike lines linguistic London Love’s lovers Lucrezio M. C. Bradbrook Malvolio marriage Measure for Measure Menander Menander’s metaphor Midsummer Night’s Dream mind mistaken identity mistaken identity plot monologue Olivia person Plautine Plautus play play’s problem comedies pronouns prosopopoeia Pseudolus psychological recognized Renaissance comedy represent rhetoric of consciousness rhetorical questions role romance Rosalind Salingar scene self—address sense Shakespeare Shakespeare Survey Shakespeare’s characters soliloquy Sosia suggests Terence Terence’s theme thou tradition tragedy trans Twelfth Night Viola words