Shakespearean CriticismMichelle Lee This detailed series provides comprehensive coverage of critical interpretations of the plays of Shakespeare. Volumes one through ten present critical overviews of each play and feature criticism from the 17th century to the present. Volumes 11-26 focus on the history of Shakespeare's plays on the stage and in important film adaptations. Volumes 27-56 focus on criticism published after 1960 and provide readers with thematic approaches to Shakespeare's works. Starting with Vol. 57 the series provides general criticism published since 1990 and historical criticism not featured in previous volumes on four to five plays or works per volume. Beginning with Vol. 60, the series replaced its annual compilation of essays representing the year's most noteworthy Shakespearean scholarship with topic entries, comprised of essays that analyze various topics or themes found Shakespeare's works. Approximately 90-95% of critical essays are full text. Each volume includes a cumulative character index, a topic index and a topic index arranged by play title. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 68
Page 120
... live , and somehow the order of nature itself suddenly seems infinitely less benign . No one can deny that , on " this great stage of fools " which is the world we live in , the gods allow men and women to be tortured needlessly ...
... live , and somehow the order of nature itself suddenly seems infinitely less benign . No one can deny that , on " this great stage of fools " which is the world we live in , the gods allow men and women to be tortured needlessly ...
Page 214
... live long . What say you uncle ? RICH . ( Discourses , 404 ) Richard seems to possess this complete prudence . For ... live ; Death makes no conquest of this conqueror , For now he lives in fame , though not in life . ( III.i.69-88 ) How ...
... live long . What say you uncle ? RICH . ( Discourses , 404 ) Richard seems to possess this complete prudence . For ... live ; Death makes no conquest of this conqueror , For now he lives in fame , though not in life . ( III.i.69-88 ) How ...
Page 276
... live in a world of their dreams , but not in the sense in which they desire to do so . Too easily tempted to take their dreams for reality , they build up a world of flattering il- lusions , forgetting how quickly a dream can turn into ...
... live in a world of their dreams , but not in the sense in which they desire to do so . Too easily tempted to take their dreams for reality , they build up a world of flattering il- lusions , forgetting how quickly a dream can turn into ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Antonio Ariel associated audience become Belarius body politic Britain Caesar Caliban Cambridge characters Christ Christian Cloten conscience Coriolanus court critics Cymbeline Cymbeline's daughter death divine dramatic early modern edition Elizabeth Elizabethan emblem emblem books emblematic ence England English Erwin Panofsky essay father Ferdinand figure Guiderius Hamlet Henry Henry VI heroic human Iachimo icon iconography imagery Imogen Innogen island Jacobean James John King Lear language London Lord Lucrece Macbeth magic manacle marriage Mars masque means melancholy Miranda moral murder nature Ophelia Othello performance Pericles play play's Posthumus Posthumus's Prince Prospero Queen rape reference Renaissance rhetorical Richard Richard III Roman Rome royal Saturn scene sense sexual Shake Shakespeare soul speare speare's speech spirit stage Stephano suggests Sycorax symbolic Tempest theater thee thou throne tion Titus Andronicus tradition tragedy Univ University Press visual Wild Winter's Tale words wounds York