Shakespearean CriticismMichele Lee Presents literary criticism on the plays and poetry of Shakespeare. Critical essays are selected from leading sources, including journals, magazines, books, reviews, diaries, newspapers, pamphlets, and scholarly papers. Includes commentary by Shakespeare's contemporaries as well as a full range of views from later centuries, with an emphasis on contemporary analysis. Includes aesthetic criticism, textual criticism, and criticism of Shakespeare in performance. |
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Page 13
... cultural formation . ' In truth , I cannot decide which is the more difficult project to understand our own bodies as cultural ob- jects or to determine what members of another cul- ture in this case , one several centuries earlier than ...
... cultural formation . ' In truth , I cannot decide which is the more difficult project to understand our own bodies as cultural ob- jects or to determine what members of another cul- ture in this case , one several centuries earlier than ...
Page 62
... cultural assumptions about domestic violence , past and present , complicates the comedy of taming a shrew . To enjoy the comedy of the play , readers and viewers must work to see domestic vio- lence from the point of view of an abuser ...
... cultural assumptions about domestic violence , past and present , complicates the comedy of taming a shrew . To enjoy the comedy of the play , readers and viewers must work to see domestic vio- lence from the point of view of an abuser ...
Page 69
... cultural tradition that accepts coercive bonding and oppression as long as they are free of physical violence . The Taming of the Shrew reproduces cultural desires for masculine domination as well as assures its audi- ence that Kate ...
... cultural tradition that accepts coercive bonding and oppression as long as they are free of physical violence . The Taming of the Shrew reproduces cultural desires for masculine domination as well as assures its audi- ence that Kate ...
Contents
Violence in Shakespeares Works | 1 |
The Rape of Lucrece | 77 |
Titus Andronicus | 169 |
Copyright | |
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abuse Achilles action Adonis Ajax argues aristocratic beauty becomes behavior blood body characters chastity Chaucer chiastic child murder Collatine Collatine's crime Criseyde critics cultural death Desdemona desire domestic violence doth dramatic early modern Elizabethan England erotic essay example eyes father fear female figure gender Greeks Hamlet hath Hector Helen Henry honor husband infanticide Kate kill king King Lear lence literary London Lucrece's Lucretia male means moral Murdering Mothers narrative narrator Othello painting Pandarus Petruchio's play poem poem's political praise queen Rape of Lucrece reader reading Renaissance representation rhetorical Richard III Romeo and Juliet scene sexual Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's Lucrece Shrew Sinon social Sonnets speare's speech stanza Stockholm syndrome story suicide Taming Tarquin thou tion Titus Andronicus Tragedy trans Troilus and Cressida Troilus's Trojan Troy Ulysses University Press Venus and Adonis victim wife Winter's Tale woman women words York