Shakespearean CriticismJoseph C. Tardiff Annotation Beginning with Volume 13 in the series, Shakespeare Criticism has been published as an annual selection of noteworthy contributions to Shakespearean scholarship published during the previous year. Seventeen of the essays in SC19 originally appeared as chapters in books. The 26 journal articles included are drawn from ten different periodicals. Together, these 43 essays provide current assessments of nearly three-quarters of the Shakespeare canon. Addressed to a wide audience, including advanced secondary school students, undergraduate and graduate students, and teachers. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR. |
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Page 81
... argues were largely younger sons of the gentry ; nevertheless , by far the majority of newcomers were prosperous yeomen . 12 Although Stone had original- ly defined marriage as ' the easiest road to riches ' , Wright- son concludes , as ...
... argues were largely younger sons of the gentry ; nevertheless , by far the majority of newcomers were prosperous yeomen . 12 Although Stone had original- ly defined marriage as ' the easiest road to riches ' , Wright- son concludes , as ...
Page 102
... argues , the problem with sexual difference is that " it constrains feminist critical thought within the concep- tual frame of a universal sex opposition . " The result is ei- ther " woman as the difference from man , both universal ...
... argues , the problem with sexual difference is that " it constrains feminist critical thought within the concep- tual frame of a universal sex opposition . " The result is ei- ther " woman as the difference from man , both universal ...
Page 343
... argues that Lear's madness re- sults from his rage at maternal deprivation and that it enables him eventually to ... argue characterizes this speech . Although Weimann ( curiously ) does not discuss Ophelia's madness , it functions in ...
... argues that Lear's madness re- sults from his rage at maternal deprivation and that it enables him eventually to ... argue characterizes this speech . Although Weimann ( curiously ) does not discuss Ophelia's madness , it functions in ...
Contents
Taming the Womans | 3 |
Anamorphism | 33 |
Antipholus Katherine and Proteus | 41 |
Copyright | |
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