Julius CaesarClarendon Press, 1984 - 253 páginas Arthur Humphreys provides a fresh look at the play's date and its place in the Shakespeare canon and examines Shakespeare's transmutation of history into drama. He investigates the play's ethical and moral concerns and analyses its fortunes in performance, from its first staging to modern productions in different media. |
Dentro del libro
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Página 29
... Coriolanus ' truly Roman ' , and Pope considered Shakespeare ' very knowing in the customs , rites and manners of Antiquity . In . . . Julius Caesar , not only the Spirit , but Manners , of the Romans are exactly drawn . " Thomas Rymer ...
... Coriolanus ' truly Roman ' , and Pope considered Shakespeare ' very knowing in the customs , rites and manners of Antiquity . In . . . Julius Caesar , not only the Spirit , but Manners , of the Romans are exactly drawn . " Thomas Rymer ...
Página 31
... Coriolanus , ident- ifying heroism , virtue , and fame , relate to ' the composite heroic image , language , and style ' of classical epic.1 Characters strike impressive attitudes of body and mind , conforming , as Cleopatra was to say ...
... Coriolanus , ident- ifying heroism , virtue , and fame , relate to ' the composite heroic image , language , and style ' of classical epic.1 Characters strike impressive attitudes of body and mind , conforming , as Cleopatra was to say ...
Página 33
... Coriolanus to the disinterested idealism of a Brutus . For Cassius , honour is the autonomy of the man ' born free as Caesar ' and refusing to obey the fiat of another . ' Believe me for mine honour ' is Brutus ' appeal to his hearers ...
... Coriolanus to the disinterested idealism of a Brutus . For Cassius , honour is the autonomy of the man ' born free as Caesar ' and refusing to obey the fiat of another . ' Believe me for mine honour ' is Brutus ' appeal to his hearers ...
Contenido
Politics and Morality | 35 |
The Plays Style | 42 |
The Play in Performance | 48 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Abbott Alarum Antony's Appian Artemidorus battle bear blood Brutus and Cassius Caesar's death Caius Calpurnia CAPELL Capitol Casca Cato characters Cicero Cimber Cinna CLITUS Commentary conj conspirators Coriolanus crown dead Decius doth edition Elizabethan enemies Enter Exeunt Exit fear FIFTH PLEBEIAN Flavius Folio FOURTH PLEBEIAN friends ghost give gods hand hath hear heart Henry honour humour Ides of March Julius Caesar kill Kittredge Lepidus liberty Ligarius lines lord Lucilius Lucius Lupercalia Mark Antony Marullus means Messala Metellus Mirror for Magistrates murder night noble Octavius OED's first occurrence oration Oxford Philippi Pindarus play play's PLEBEIAN Plutarch Pompey Pompey's POPE Portia prompt-book Publius Ripley Roman Rome ROWE scene Senate sense Shake Shakespeare soldiers SOOTHSAYER speak speech spirit stage stand Strato sword thee things THIRD PLEBEIAN thou art Tilley Titinius tragedy Trebonius unto Varro vols Volumnius words ΙΟ