Drama in Early Tudor Britain, 1485-1558University of Nebraska Press, 1995 - 394 halaman |
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Halaman 54
... spectators , who very likely inter- acted with the performers , as in the French sottie tradition and the inter ... spectator would probably have been even greater . In comparison with the interlude , the folk dramas were short . The two ...
... spectators , who very likely inter- acted with the performers , as in the French sottie tradition and the inter ... spectator would probably have been even greater . In comparison with the interlude , the folk dramas were short . The two ...
Halaman 107
... spectators to make the proper moral judgment . Vives approves of the more recent allegorical drama that through the portrayal of virtues and vices admonishes the audience to moral action , provided these plays are not so obscure as to ...
... spectators to make the proper moral judgment . Vives approves of the more recent allegorical drama that through the portrayal of virtues and vices admonishes the audience to moral action , provided these plays are not so obscure as to ...
Halaman 358
... spectator " ( Ars poetica 180-82 ; Less vividly is the mind stirred by what finds entrance through the ears than by what is brought before the trusty eyes , and what the spectator can see for himself ) . / WORKS CITED Adams , J. Q. , ed ...
... spectator " ( Ars poetica 180-82 ; Less vividly is the mind stirred by what finds entrance through the ears than by what is brought before the trusty eyes , and what the spectator can see for himself ) . / WORKS CITED Adams , J. Q. , ed ...
Isi
The Civic Drama | 16 |
The Morality Play before the Reformation | 37 |
Folk Drama | 48 |
Hak Cipta | |
25 bagian lainnya tidak diperlihatkan
Istilah dan frasa umum
Absalom action adapted allegorical appears Aristophanes audience Bale Bale's biblical Calisto Cambridge Celestina chapter characters Christ Christopherson church civic drama classical comedy comic commentaries contemporary context court Cupar cycle death declares demonstrates dialogue didactic Donatus early Tudor edition emphasizes England English entertainment epitasis Erasmus Erasmus's Eunuchus Euripides example extant Farce father French Gammer Grimald Henry VIII Herod humanist identified indicates instruction interlude Jephthah Johan Johan John John Bale John Rastell king later Latin Lindsay Lindsay's London Mary Magdalene Mary's Medieval Melebea Meriasek morality play More's motif N-Town Nicholas Udall Oxford pattern perceived performance Philogonus Plautus plot poetry poets popular prodigal protasis Queen Reformation religious Renaissance represents Respublica Roister Doister role saints satire scene Seneca sixteenth century Skelton stage suggests Terence Terence's Terentian Thomas tion tradition tragedy translation Udall Udall's vices virtue Vives Vives's W. W. Greg Watson wife Wit's youth