Class and Society in ShakespeareBloomsbury Academic, 2007 M11 15 - 596 páginas The Continuum Shakespeare Dictionaries provide authoritative yet accessible guides to the principal subject-areas covered by the plays and poetry of Shakespeare. The dictionaries provide readers with a comprehensive guide to the topic under discussion, its occurrence and significance in Shakespeare's works, and its contemporary meanings. Entries range from a few lines in length to mini-essays, providing the opportunity to explore an important literary or historical concept or idea in depth. Entries include: apothecary, bear-baiting, Caesar, degree, gentry, Henry V, kingdom, London, masque, nobility, plague, society, treason, usury, whore and youth. They follow an easy to use three-part structure: a general introduction to the term or topic; a survey of its significance and use in Shakespeare's plays and a guide to further reading. |
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Página 11
... context of associations that give it a sense of a certain danger . Someone who is ambitious takes the logic of social competition ( see emulation ) to an extreme . ( b ) There seems to be a cultural context in which ambition operates in ...
... context of associations that give it a sense of a certain danger . Someone who is ambitious takes the logic of social competition ( see emulation ) to an extreme . ( b ) There seems to be a cultural context in which ambition operates in ...
Página 98
... context of what we call the Hundred Years ' War . The exchange is also affected by the Renaissance context within which it is performed . There are two reasons why this is so . The first is simple historical hindsight , since many of ...
... context of what we call the Hundred Years ' War . The exchange is also affected by the Renaissance context within which it is performed . There are two reasons why this is so . The first is simple historical hindsight , since many of ...
Página 398
... context , ' merit ' is socially constructed , rather than a personal quality . The poet's love is clearly overdetermined by an unequal relationship ; it is not , in this poem at least , some form of personal bond . The poems to the ...
... context , ' merit ' is socially constructed , rather than a personal quality . The poet's love is clearly overdetermined by an unequal relationship ; it is not , in this poem at least , some form of personal bond . The poems to the ...
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action Anne Boleyn Antony appears aristocracy army associated battle behaviour Brutus Buckingham Caesar cardinal Cleopatra contemporary context Coriolanus course court crown crucial Cymbeline daughter death denote describes dramatic Duke of York Edward Elizabeth emblematic England especially exactly example faction fighting Falstaff famous father favour France French gender Gloucester Hamlet hath heir Henry VI Henry VIII Henry's history plays honour Hotspur House of Lancaster House of York husband HVIII Iago important issue Juliet Katherine Katherine of Aragon kind King Henry king's Lady Lancastrian Lear logic London Lord Macbeth Margaret of Anjou marriage married means medieval metaphorical military monarch nobility noble occurs period Picard play's political Prince problem queen rank reason reference reign religious Renaissance Richard Richard II Roman Romeo royal says scene sense sexual Shakespeare Shakespeare's audience social Sonnet speech Suffolk term thee thou throne Tudor usage usurpation Wolsey woman women word