In Another Country: Feminist Perspectives on Renaissance Drama, Volumen10Dorothea Kehler, Susan Baker Scarecrow Press, 1991 - 345 páginas This anthology aligns feminist essays about Shakespeare with essays on other dramatists of the English Renaissance, particularly Peele, Marlowe, Webster, Marston, and Middleton. Foregrounding the intertextuality of Elizabethian drama, the thirteen essays_eleven of them new_explore the contribution of the stage to various feminist subjects, drawing on diverse theoretical approaches_formalists, materialist, historical, new historicist, deconstructionist, psychoanalytic, rhetorical_and resisting the figuration of feminist criticism as simple or univocal. Essayists include Laura Bromley, Mary Ann Bushman, Christy Desmet, Coppelia Kahn, Margaret Mikesell, Thomas Moisan, Jeanie Grant Moorem Phyllis Rackin, James Schiffer, Jeremy Tambling, Carolyn Whitney-Brown, and the editors. With extensive bibliographies. |
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Página 21
... relationship to the visual acquisition of knowledge , both the mirror and the perspective possess qualities which make them ideal metaphors . In the act of reflecting , the mirror becomes analogous with metaphor itself , since a ...
... relationship to the visual acquisition of knowledge , both the mirror and the perspective possess qualities which make them ideal metaphors . In the act of reflecting , the mirror becomes analogous with metaphor itself , since a ...
Página 128
... relationship with Romeo as she had been in Brooke's poem , promising Romeo that she would " procure " someone to find out what arrangements he had made for their nuptials - nuptials which she proposes in the same sentence ( II.ii. 142 ...
... relationship with Romeo as she had been in Brooke's poem , promising Romeo that she would " procure " someone to find out what arrangements he had made for their nuptials - nuptials which she proposes in the same sentence ( II.ii. 142 ...
Página 184
... relationship is most apparent toward the end of David and Bethsabe , when David is told of the " well - deserved " death of his rebellious son Absalon in language suiting the social relationship of subject and monarch : Happinesse and ...
... relationship is most apparent toward the end of David and Bethsabe , when David is told of the " well - deserved " death of his rebellious son Absalon in language suiting the social relationship of subject and monarch : Happinesse and ...
Contenido
Introduction Dorothea Kehler and Susan Baker | 1 |
Laura G Bromley | 50 |
Rhetoric of | 71 |
Derechos de autor | |
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In Another Country: Feminist Perspectives on Renaissance Drama, Volumen10 Dorothea Kehler,Susan Baker Vista previa limitada - 1991 |
Términos y frases comunes
Abigail Absalon Antony and Cleopatra audience authority Barabas Barabas's beard Bethsabe Bethsabe's Brachiano Cambridge Univ characters chaste chastity Comedy Coppélia daughter David death desire discourses Dissertation Abstracts International Duchess of Malfi Dutch Courtesan Elizabeth Elizabethan Emilia England English Renaissance Essays father female feminine feminist criticism figure Flamineo Freevill gender heroines husband identity ideology Isabel Isabella Jacobean Drama Jew of Malta Kahn King Lady Macbeth language Literature London lust male Margaret marriage married Marston's Mary masculine matrimony Measure for Measure Merchant of Venice metaphor Methuen mirror Noble Kinsmen Othello paradox patriarchal patriarchalist Paulina perspective play's pleasure political Press protagonists queen relationship Renaissance Drama rhetorical Richard Richard II role Romeo and Juliet scene sense sexual Shakespeare Quarterly Shakespeare Studies Shakespeare's Plays social society speech stage subversive Swetnam tion Tragedy tragic Vittoria Webster whore widow wife Winter's Tale wives woman womb women York