Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Volume 28Gale Research Company, 1984 |
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Page 124
... French often anticipate and thus seem to accept the feminization of their homeland and its openness to English ravishment . When the French king refers to Henry's ancestry , he describes not Henry's Norman forefathers , but rather the ...
... French often anticipate and thus seem to accept the feminization of their homeland and its openness to English ravishment . When the French king refers to Henry's ancestry , he describes not Henry's Norman forefathers , but rather the ...
Page 152
... French prisoners , ordered by Hen- ry , bears out Hazlitt's dictum that " No reader of history can be a lover of kings . " Expunging this material from the film , as Branagh does , not only works to salvage Henry's " dignity , " it also ...
... French prisoners , ordered by Hen- ry , bears out Hazlitt's dictum that " No reader of history can be a lover of kings . " Expunging this material from the film , as Branagh does , not only works to salvage Henry's " dignity , " it also ...
Page 167
... French princess begins the process of Englishing her own body , starting with the hand ( a metonymy for marriage ) and ending ( by an accident of translation - metaphorically if not properly ) in the middle region with " Le foot ...
... French princess begins the process of Englishing her own body , starting with the hand ( a metonymy for marriage ) and ending ( by an accident of translation - metaphorically if not properly ) in the middle region with " Le foot ...
Contents
Texts and Revels in Twelfth Night | 13 |
Lynda E Boose The Taming of the Shrew Good Husbandry and Enclosure | 21 |
Juliet Dusinberre As Who Liked It? | 31 |
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