Lear's Self-discoveryUniversity of California Press, 1967 - 154 pages |
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Page 23
... body . This is not just the body of the one who would learn to know himself , but of man's ( and woman's ) body in general . Boaistuau would make knowledge of the body central to nosce teipsum : Man to my judgement , hath inough wherein ...
... body . This is not just the body of the one who would learn to know himself , but of man's ( and woman's ) body in general . Boaistuau would make knowledge of the body central to nosce teipsum : Man to my judgement , hath inough wherein ...
Page 24
... body , approving the dignitie and immor- talitie thereof . " It is doubtless only accidental that at least three of the books concerned with nosce teipsum have as their procedure a study of the body leading to an affirmation of its ...
... body , approving the dignitie and immor- talitie thereof . " It is doubtless only accidental that at least three of the books concerned with nosce teipsum have as their procedure a study of the body leading to an affirmation of its ...
Page 148
... body , 124-125 ; woman as illus- trating depravity of , 125 , 126 , 134 ; body showing grotesqueness of , 126 ; Edmund's absence of il- lusions about , 127. See also Body ; Woman Man , unaccommodated : Lear and Edgar as , 88 ; storm and ...
... body , 124-125 ; woman as illus- trating depravity of , 125 , 126 , 134 ; body showing grotesqueness of , 126 ; Edmund's absence of il- lusions about , 127. See also Body ; Woman Man , unaccommodated : Lear and Edgar as , 88 ; storm and ...
Contents
Some Renaissance Contexts | 12 |
The Emergence of Lear as Thinker | 44 |
Other Characters on the Rack | 83 |
Copyright | |
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affliction Angelo argue awareness beginning Boaistuau body Brutus chapter character Charron Christian comes Cordelia corrupt course critics depiction disguise doth dramatic earlier Edgar Edmund father feel flesh foil to Lear Fool Fool's Gloucester Gloucester's Goneril and Regan Hamlet hath Hugh Latimer human Huntington Library Iago identity important insight intelligence interpretation John Davies Kent kind King Lear Knight knowledge later Lear as thinker Lear learns Lear's mind Lear's self-discovery least madness mainly man's means merely moral Myles Coverdale nature never nosce teipsum Othello passions perhaps philosopher play question reason recognition recognize Renaissance Renaissance treatises Richard Richard II ritualistic scene seems self-knowledge self-pity sense sexual Shake Shakespeare Quarterly significant Sir John Davies slenderly known soliloquy speech stage storm tell Theodore Spencer things thinking Thomas Becon thought tion Titus Titus Andronicus tough world tragedy true unaccommodated unkind daughters wisdom woman writes