Shakespeare's Practical Jokes: An Introduction to the Comic in His WorkAssociated University Presse, 2007 - 236 halaman There is a mountain of work on Shakespeare's comedies but very little on what, in all the plays, can be described as comic. This title approaches this topic via a number of practical joke episodes, some of them well known - the deceptions Hal and Poins practice on Falstaff, the tricking of Malvolio or Parolles. |
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Halaman 15
... sense , the most familiar is probably the one to be found in the work of Northrop Frye . In his account ( shorn of its tech- nicalities and complications ) , a comedy is a play that pits the young against the old and in the course of ...
... sense , the most familiar is probably the one to be found in the work of Northrop Frye . In his account ( shorn of its tech- nicalities and complications ) , a comedy is a play that pits the young against the old and in the course of ...
Halaman 17
... senses of com- edy that this passage illustrates may not do much harm , but can hardly do much good ; and it has perhaps helped to foster the illusion that , because there is a great deal of writing on Shakespearean com- edy , the comic ...
... senses of com- edy that this passage illustrates may not do much harm , but can hardly do much good ; and it has perhaps helped to foster the illusion that , because there is a great deal of writing on Shakespearean com- edy , the comic ...
Halaman 21
... sense of the poor return he has had for these services so overwhelms him that he turns from the audience and addresses Crab directly with a final reproach : " [ D ] id not I bid thee mark me , and do as I do ? When didst thou see me ...
... sense of the poor return he has had for these services so overwhelms him that he turns from the audience and addresses Crab directly with a final reproach : " [ D ] id not I bid thee mark me , and do as I do ? When didst thou see me ...
Halaman 23
... sense to say that , if we laugh at hunchbacks , it is because we regard them as people who have con- tracted an ugly stoop " by a kind of physical obstinacy , by rigidity , " who are mechanically persisting in a bad habit ? In further ...
... sense to say that , if we laugh at hunchbacks , it is because we regard them as people who have con- tracted an ugly stoop " by a kind of physical obstinacy , by rigidity , " who are mechanically persisting in a bad habit ? In further ...
Halaman 25
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Isi
11 | |
15 | |
Female Victims and Female Jokers | 32 |
The Privileges of Rank | 58 |
Falstaff | 84 |
The Ideal Victim | 110 |
How Far Can You Go? | 136 |
The Triumph over Shame | 160 |
Practical Jokes and Evil Practices | 186 |
Notes | 207 |
Bibliography | 225 |
Index | 233 |
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Shakespeare's Practical Jokes: An Introduction to the Comic in His Work David Ellis Tampilan cuplikan - 2007 |
Shakespeare's Practical Jokes: An Introduction to the Comic in His Work David Ellis Pratinjau tidak tersedia - 2007 |
Istilah dan frasa umum
actor All's amusement appears Arthur Koestler audience Beatrice beffa Benedick Bergson Bertram Cambridge University Press Catella certainly character claim clown comedy comic critics D. H. Lawrence deception described disguised dramatic Edited effect Elizabethan English episode essay example Faber fact Falstaff feel Feste figure fool Frayn Freud funny Hal and Poins Hal's Harold Bloom Helena Henry IV plays humiliation humor Ibid Johnson joke played jokers King Lafew Lasca laugh laughter Launce Lavatch lines London lord Lorenzo Malvolio Manente Maria Merry Wives Michael Frayn Molière Northrop Frye Olivia Oxford Parolles Parolles's performance play's practical joke reason reference remarks replies response Ricciardo Robert Armin role says scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shrew Sir Andrew Sir Toby social someone speare's stage story suggest superego thou tion Titus Titus Andronicus trick Twelfth Night victim Viola W. H. Auden Williams words young