Dramatic Theory and Criticism: Greeks to GrotowskiHolt, Rinehart and Winston, 1974 - 1003 من الصفحات |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 61
الصفحة 404
... Living.5 Tragicomedy . A drama compounded of merry and serious events . We have often had tragicomedies upon the English theatre with success , but in that sort of composition the tragedy and comedy are in distinct scenes . -Gay ...
... Living.5 Tragicomedy . A drama compounded of merry and serious events . We have often had tragicomedies upon the English theatre with success , but in that sort of composition the tragedy and comedy are in distinct scenes . -Gay ...
الصفحة 741
... living . The living being with whom we were con- cerned here was , above all , a human being , a person . A mechanical device , on the contrary , is a thing . What produced laughter , therefore , if we may regard the image from this ...
... living . The living being with whom we were con- cerned here was , above all , a human being , a person . A mechanical device , on the contrary , is a thing . What produced laughter , therefore , if we may regard the image from this ...
الصفحة 784
... living bond of unity ; she suggested , without satisfying her own suggestions ; she urged to life , without herself attaining life ; she gave the catalogue of a picture- gallery , but not the paintings . The wintry stem of Speech ...
... living bond of unity ; she suggested , without satisfying her own suggestions ; she urged to life , without herself attaining life ; she gave the catalogue of a picture- gallery , but not the paintings . The wintry stem of Speech ...
المحتوى
The Art of Poetry | 67 |
On the Sublime | 76 |
GIOVANNI BOCCACCIO 103 The Genealogy of the Gentile Gods | 112 |
حقوق النشر | |
39 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
absurd action actors Aeschylus ancient Aristophanes Aristotle artist audience beautiful bourgeois tragedy character Chorus comedy comic contrary Corneille Creon critics delight DIONYSUS drama dramatist effect emotions Epic poetry esthetic Euripides excite expression eyes fear feeling fiction French FRIEND give gods Goethe Greek happy hero honor human Iago idea imagination imitation interest kind language laugh laughter manner means merely mind misfortune modern Molière moral nature never object observed Oedipus Othello pain passion Peripeteia person Philoctetes Pierre Corneille pity Plautus play pleasure plot poem poet poetical poetry produce reason representation represented ridiculous romantic rules Samuel Taylor Coleridge scene sense sentiments Shakespeare Sophocles sorrow soul speak spectator spirit stage story sublime suffering theatre things three unities tion tragedy tragic tragicomedy translated true truth unity verse vice virtue well-made play whole words write