From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 86
Page 64
... at ” as the audience no longer looks at her but looks at her being looked at . She is now clearly the object of the male look , the pawn in a male power struggle , standing by mutely as the King and Bertram proceed to debate ...
... at ” as the audience no longer looks at her but looks at her being looked at . She is now clearly the object of the male look , the pawn in a male power struggle , standing by mutely as the King and Bertram proceed to debate ...
Page 73
The blindfold would both deprive Bertram of the look and signify his blindness to the threat of castration that originally drove him from Helena . Diana could plausibly place the blindfold on Bertram if the first part of the scene were ...
The blindfold would both deprive Bertram of the look and signify his blindness to the threat of castration that originally drove him from Helena . Diana could plausibly place the blindfold on Bertram if the first part of the scene were ...
Page 170
He makes the offer and almost a serious and revealing gaffe : Let us look closely at the relationship between Princess Margaret , later Queen of England , and Suffolk as given by Shakespeare . In 1 Henry VI , V. iii . , the French are ...
He makes the offer and almost a serious and revealing gaffe : Let us look closely at the relationship between Princess Margaret , later Queen of England , and Suffolk as given by Shakespeare . In 1 Henry VI , V. iii . , the French are ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action All's Antony appears audience becomes begins Bertram body Brutus calls Cassius cause characters claim comedy comic Countess course critics death desire Diana dramatic Duke Edward effect Elizabethan England English fact father female final French Gentlemen give hand Helena Henry Henry VI honor interpretation Joan Julius Caesar King language later letter lines London look lord male Margaret marriage means moral murder nature never oath offer once Parolles performance play play's political position present Press problem production Proteus provides Queen question reading reason response rhetoric Richard role Roman Rome says scene seems sense serve sexual Shake Shakespeare Silvia social soliloquy speak speech spirit stage suggests things thou tion turn University Valentine virginity virtue wife woman women York young