Shakespeare's Agonistic Comedy: Poetics, Analysis, CriticismIn one respect, the purpose of this book is to define the characteristics and to map the canon of Shakespeare's agonistic comedy; in other words, to provide a poetics. Such a task has its own importance and preliminary value if fundamental patterns and functions have not been recognized as such in the critical analysis of a body of texts. Part I of Shakespeare's Agonistic Comedy identifies the structural characteristics of the provisionally outlined canon, focuses on apparently borderline cases (Petruchio and Katherina, Benedick and Beatrice, Jaques and Don John, as well as that of Love's Labour's Lost) in order to define the canon more precisely, defines the distinctive perspective generated by agonistic comedy, and examines the thematic and referential patterns that may appear prima facie to be characteristic of this comedy: violence and revenge. Throughout this section dealing with poetics, Beiner emphasizes that agonistic comedy is capable of being self-complete and independent and yet in Shakespearean comedy it never generates an entire play; nor does it appear in every play from Errors to Twelfth Night. A poetics of Shakespeare's agonistic comedy is necessarily related to the wider field of a poetics of Shakespearean comedy, which in turn is related to the even wider area of comic traditions. |
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Съдържание
25 | |
54 | |
The Agonistic Perspective ReaderSpectator Response | 77 |
Violence in the Comedy of Love Errors to Twelfth Night Referential and Thematic Patterns | 88 |
Comic Revenge and Agons Referential and Thematic Patterns Continued | 118 |
The Major Texts | 137 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor | 139 |
The Merchant of Venice | 164 |
Twelfth Night | 199 |
Notes | 229 |
Bibliography | 278 |
Index | 288 |
Често срещани думи и фрази
action agon agonistic antagonist Antonio appear attitude authority awareness basic becomes beginning behavior certainly characters Christian clarification comedy of love comes comic complete concerned confrontation connected contrast conventional created critical danger deal defeat desire developments direct distinction Dream effect error especially evidence Falstaff festive fiction figure final force fortune function genre given gives goal human husband important indicates initial instance involving issue kind lead least less Malvolio manipulation marriage means Merchant Merry negative Night Olivia pattern perspective play plot poetics Portia positive possible present problem provides punishment reason reference relation relationship remark removed resolution respect response revenge ridiculous romance saturnalian says scene seen sense Shakespeare's Shakespearean comedy Shrew Shylock social specific strategy structure supposed threat tradition turn Twelfth University Press values Venice violence wives young
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