Shakespeare's Poetic Styles: Verse into DramaRoutledge, 11/10/2013 - 272 من الصفحات First published in 1980. At their most successful, Shakespeare's styles are strategies to make plain the limits of thought and feeling which define the significance of human actions. John Baxter analyses the way in which these limits are reached, and also provides a strong argument for the idea that the power of Shakespearean drama depends upon the co-operation of poetic style and dramatic form. Three plays are examined in detail in the text: The Tragedy of Mustapha by Fulke Greville and Richard II and Macbeth by Shakespeare. |
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الصفحة 1
... Winters refers in this sentence produced what he calls elsewhere the native plain style , 2 and the 1939 essay from ... Winters's claims for the centrality of the plain style have been corroborated and refined by a number of scholars ...
... Winters refers in this sentence produced what he calls elsewhere the native plain style , 2 and the 1939 essay from ... Winters's claims for the centrality of the plain style have been corroborated and refined by a number of scholars ...
الصفحة 3
... Winters . Though he celebrates repeatedly the achievements in the short poem in English , Winters's infrequent discussions of drama offer some challenging criticisms of the form . From early in his career Winters was suspicious of what ...
... Winters . Though he celebrates repeatedly the achievements in the short poem in English , Winters's infrequent discussions of drama offer some challenging criticisms of the form . From early in his career Winters was suspicious of what ...
الصفحة 4
... Winters here poses for the modern critic has not been answered satisfactorily . While Winters's account of the sixteenth - century lyric has been refined and extended by several other writers , his discussion of dramatic form has ...
... Winters here poses for the modern critic has not been answered satisfactorily . While Winters's account of the sixteenth - century lyric has been refined and extended by several other writers , his discussion of dramatic form has ...
الصفحة 5
... Winters's definition arrogates an unwarranted despotism to language in drama , and denies the independence of the theatre as an art form in its own right , with its own laws of realization . It is a superficial view of culture that can ...
... Winters's definition arrogates an unwarranted despotism to language in drama , and denies the independence of the theatre as an art form in its own right , with its own laws of realization . It is a superficial view of culture that can ...
الصفحة 6
... Winters's criticisms of drama . In Mustapha , Richard II , and Macbeth it is possible to see the demands that dramatic form makes of poetic styles and also to see the plenitude produced in the exchange . Greville's Mustapha I Some of ...
... Winters's criticisms of drama . In Mustapha , Richard II , and Macbeth it is possible to see the demands that dramatic form makes of poetic styles and also to see the plenitude produced in the exchange . Greville's Mustapha I Some of ...
المحتوى
7 | |
Tragedy and history in Richard II | 46 |
the moral and the golden | 56 |
the metaphysical and | 77 |
style and the character | 106 |
style and the character | 114 |
Tragic doings political order | 144 |
bombast and wonder | 168 |
style and form | 196 |
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achieve action analysis appear appropriate attempt beginning Bolingbroke calls cause character claims clear clearly close couplet critical death despite drama earth effect Elizabethan emotional England English especially essentially example experience expression fact fear feeling figure finally Gaunt give golden style Greville hand human idea imagery images imagination imitation important individual intention John kind king language least less live London Macbeth matter means metaphysical mind moral murder Mustapha nature offers once opening passage plain style play poem poetic poetry political possible present problem question reality reason reference remarks represented rhetoric Richard Richard II scene seems sense Shakespeare simply soliloquy speak speech suggests things thou thought tion traditional tragedy tragic true truth understanding University Press verse whole Winters wonder York