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 56
... reading reassemble the text so that what seems out of place has a place and if so , when does this process properly end ? The Comedy of Errors raises a host of questions concern- ing levels of awareness in both the text and the reader ...
... reading reassemble the text so that what seems out of place has a place and if so , when does this process properly end ? The Comedy of Errors raises a host of questions concern- ing levels of awareness in both the text and the reader ...
Page 57
... reading all too easily de- nies the cultural context of any reading and so disowns re- sponsibility for its point of view . It relies upon an unspo- ken fantasy that we can avoid being displaced by other readings as long as we ...
... reading all too easily de- nies the cultural context of any reading and so disowns re- sponsibility for its point of view . It relies upon an unspo- ken fantasy that we can avoid being displaced by other readings as long as we ...
Page 59
... reading the twins as representa- tives of their father's divided state , since such a reading de- nies that this is a play about denial ? " I deny it not " ( 5.1.379 ) is a phrase that we hear and yet deny throughout this curious work ...
... reading the twins as representa- tives of their father's divided state , since such a reading de- nies that this is a play about denial ? " I deny it not " ( 5.1.379 ) is a phrase that we hear and yet deny throughout this curious work ...
Contents
Taming the Womans | 3 |
Anamorphism | 33 |
Antipholus Katherine and Proteus | 41 |
Copyright | |
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Antony Antony and Cleopatra Antony's argues audience Aufidius bear bearbaiting become Bolingbroke bridle Caesar Cambridge carnival characters Cleopatra Comedy of Errors comic Cordelia Coriolanus critics culture Cymbeline death Desdemona discourse drama dream Edgar Egeon's Elizabethan England English essay eyes Falstaff father female film gender hath heart Helena Henry Henry's human Iago Juliet Kate King John King Lear language Lear's Leontes lines London Love's Labor's Lost Macbeth madness male Malvolio marriage means ment metaphor nature noble Olivier Othello perception Pericles play play's playgoer plot political Posthumus Prince Prospero Queen reading Renaissance rhetorical Richard Richard II role Roman says scene script seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare Shrew social speak speare speare's speech stage suggests Tamburlaine Tempest theater theatrical Theseus thou tion Titania tragedy trans Twelfth Night Univ University Press Winter's Tale witchcraft witches woman women words York