Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Volume 69Gale Research Company, 1984 - 428 pages 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. 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. The plays, theme or focus of this volume include: As you like it, Henry IV, parts 1 & 2, incest, and Macbeth. - Publisher. |
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Page 271
... imagination's command . The more immediate point , however , is that Shakespeare's tragic hero exhibits a genius for symbolism . His visual imagination is capable of superimposing picture upon picture to an extent that it becomes ...
... imagination's command . The more immediate point , however , is that Shakespeare's tragic hero exhibits a genius for symbolism . His visual imagination is capable of superimposing picture upon picture to an extent that it becomes ...
Page 306
... imagination and to describe the condition of terror into which , for our sakes , Macbeth falls . Macbeth's damnation comes of a willed failure of the imagination . He permits himself , in spite of conscience , to kill his King . His ...
... imagination and to describe the condition of terror into which , for our sakes , Macbeth falls . Macbeth's damnation comes of a willed failure of the imagination . He permits himself , in spite of conscience , to kill his King . His ...
Page 309
... imaginations redeemed . The play teaches us how to become what we can become , for we live , like Macduff , not ultimately within Macbeth's imagination , but within the greater imagination of God - within the greater will to goodness in ...
... imaginations redeemed . The play teaches us how to become what we can become , for we live , like Macduff , not ultimately within Macbeth's imagination , but within the greater imagination of God - within the greater will to goodness in ...
Contents
As You Like | 1 |
Character Studies | 21 |
Production Reviews | 43 |
Copyright | |
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action appears Arden audience becomes begins blood brother called character comedy course court critics crown daughter death desire drama Duke Duncan edited effect Elizabethan English essay evil example fact Falstaff father fear feel figure final force forest gives Hal's Hamlet hand Henry Henry IV Holinshed Hotspur human humors imagination incest Jaques John kind King Lady language later Lear less lines live London Macbeth Macduff marriage means mind moral mother murder nature never once opening Orlando perhaps Pericles play present Press Prince question reading reference relation represents Richard role Rosalind scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare social soliloquy speak speech stage Studies suggests tells theme things thou thought tion Touchstone tragedy true turn University virtue wife witches York young