Studying Shakespeare: A Guide to the PlaysThis engaging book draws on all of Shakespeare's plays to show they can still be used as a guide to life.
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... soliloquy rehearses the emotional logic which underlies it: “nature has done me a grievous wrong in denying me that beauty of form which wins human love. Life owes me reparation for this, and I will see that I get it.” Freud points out ...
... soliloquy rehearses the emotional logic which underlies it: “nature has done me a grievous wrong in denying me that beauty of form which wins human love. Life owes me reparation for this, and I will see that I get it.” Freud points out ...
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Contents
1 | |
12 | |
2 Marital Life Shakespeare and Romance | 50 |
3 Political Life Shakespeare and Government | 88 |
4 Public Life Shakespeare and Social Structures | 140 |
5 Real Life Shakespeare and Suffering | 180 |
Works Cited | 223 |
Index | 235 |
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Common terms and phrases
actor All’s Angelo anger Antipholus Antony and Cleopatra attitude audience Bassanio behavior Bertram brother Brutus Bullingbrook Cassius chapter characters Claudio comedy Coriolanus Coriolanus’s court critics Cymbeline daughter death Diomedes drama Duke early modern Elizabeth Elizabethan emotional England Falstaff father female friends grief Hamlet hath Helena Henry Hermia hero Hotspur human husband Iago identity images Isabella Julius Caesar Katherine Katherine’s King John King Lear language Lear’s Leggatt lover Malvolio marriage marry Merchant of Venice Midsummer Night’s Dream mother mourning murder night Noble Kinsmen Othello Pericles Petruccio play’s plot political Portia Prince Renaissance revenge rhetorical Richard Richard III role Roman Romeo and Juliet Rosalind RSC production says scene servant sexual Shakespeare Shakespeare’s plays Shrew soliloquy speech stage story tells theater theatrical thee thou Timon Titus Andronicus tragedy Troilus and Cressida twins wife Winter’s Tale woman women wooing word