A Midsummer Night's Dream: Critical EssaysDorothea Kehler Routledge, 6 dec. 2012 - 506 pagini This volume traces the modern critical and performance history of this play, one of Shakespeare's most-loved and most-performed comedies. The essay focus on such modern concerns as feminism, deconstruction, textual theory, and queer theory. |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 5 din 21
Pagina 31
... Puck's final speech. Yet despite its ironies, Dream is itself a celebration of art and imagination. Michael Taylor (1969) urges recognition of the fairies' less pleasant aspects as well as their appeal and of Demetrius' nastiness before ...
... Puck's final speech. Yet despite its ironies, Dream is itself a celebration of art and imagination. Michael Taylor (1969) urges recognition of the fairies' less pleasant aspects as well as their appeal and of Demetrius' nastiness before ...
Pagina 60
Ți-ai atins limita de vizualizări pentru această carte.
Ți-ai atins limita de vizualizări pentru această carte.
Pagina 61
Ți-ai atins limita de vizualizări pentru această carte.
Ți-ai atins limita de vizualizări pentru această carte.
Pagina 92
Ți-ai atins limita de vizualizări pentru această carte.
Ți-ai atins limita de vizualizări pentru această carte.
Pagina 93
Ți-ai atins limita de vizualizări pentru această carte.
Ți-ai atins limita de vizualizări pentru această carte.
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
A Midsummer Night's Dream: Critical Essays Dorothea Kehler Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 2001 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
actors allusion artisans Athenian Athens audience Bottom Brook changeling changeling boy characters chronotope Ciulei comic conflict court critics cultural define Demetrius desire director discourse disfigure distortion dramatic Duke Egeus Elizabethan English erotic essay fairies feminine festive figure final find first flower Freud gender hath Helena Hermia Hippolyta hypallage ideology imagination influence interpretation Kott literary London lovers Lysander Lysander’s male marriage McClinton mechanicals metaphor Midsummer Night Midsummer Night's Dream mislined Montrose moon myth Night s Dream Oberon patriarchal performance perspective Peter Peter Brook play’s plot poet poetic political production Puck Puck’s Pyramus and Thisbe queen Quince reading reflects relationship Renaissance representation represented rhetoric role romantic scene sense sexual Shakespeare Shakespeare’s plays Shakespearean comedy significant social specific speech stage story structure suggests textual theatre theatrical theory Theseus Theseus and Hippolyta Theseus’s Titania traditional translation University Press vision wedding woman women York