Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Volume 9Gale Research Company, 1984 |
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Page 144
... language and theater , its ge- neric forms and conventions , its relationship to truth and the social order . " In the following excerpt from a 1966 essay on Coriolanus , Calderwood contends that language , which depends upon a shared ...
... language and theater , its ge- neric forms and conventions , its relationship to truth and the social order . " In the following excerpt from a 1966 essay on Coriolanus , Calderwood contends that language , which depends upon a shared ...
Page 145
... language is unacceptable , its words corrupt , its relation to truth shifting and elusive , then one must , or at least Coriolanus must , create a language of his own in which the validity and reliability of words are restored . And in ...
... language is unacceptable , its words corrupt , its relation to truth shifting and elusive , then one must , or at least Coriolanus must , create a language of his own in which the validity and reliability of words are restored . And in ...
Page 290
... language . For in the real sense such an order has no language ; or rather , the poet has no language for it . I have tried to show that the play as a structure - in its plot , dialectic and style - does not permit a more affirmative ...
... language . For in the real sense such an order has no language ; or rather , the poet has no language for it . I have tried to show that the play as a structure - in its plot , dialectic and style - does not permit a more affirmative ...
Contents
King John | 204 |
The Taming of the Shrew | 310 |
The Two Noble Kinsmen | 439 |
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action Additional Bibliography Angiers Antium Antony Antony and Cleopatra appears argues Arthur asserts audience Aufidius banishment Bastard becomes Bianca blood character citizens claims comedy comic Cominius common conflict Constance contends contrast Corio Coriolanus Coriolanus's Corioli critic death dramatic Elizabethan enemy England English essay date excerpt farce father Faulconbridge feeling give hath heart hero hero's honour Hubert human husband imagery Induction iolanus John's Julius Caesar Kate Katherina King John King Lear lord Lucentio Macbeth Marcius marriage means Menenius mind moral mother nature never noble Othello Pandulph passion patricians Petruchio play's plebeians plot Plutarch poet political praise pride Richard III Roman Rome says scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays Shrew speak speare's speech spirit Taming thee theme thing thou tragedy tragic tragic hero traitor tribunes Troublesome Reign true truth Virgilia virtue Volsces Volscians Volumnia wife words