Lear's Self-discoveryUniversity of California Press, 1967 - 154 pages |
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Page 47
... kind of self - study ; but it is a study of oneself in the attitude of grief . And it has in addition a concern with the devising of stratagem — the stratagem of grief's depiction , the kind of tactical thinking that marks the later ...
... kind of self - study ; but it is a study of oneself in the attitude of grief . And it has in addition a concern with the devising of stratagem — the stratagem of grief's depiction , the kind of tactical thinking that marks the later ...
Page 48
... kind of thinking that goes into self - insight and the kind that produces self - pity and dramatization . Both kinds require acumen of a sort , and it is natural that Shakespeare as dramatist and actor would not only sympathize with the ...
... kind of thinking that goes into self - insight and the kind that produces self - pity and dramatization . Both kinds require acumen of a sort , and it is natural that Shakespeare as dramatist and actor would not only sympathize with the ...
Page 72
... kind of interrupted , scattered , or subterranean thought is that it is an im- provement on the soliloquy . In King Lear Shakespeare might seem to have lost the faculty or inducement for the use of soliloquy , perhaps because he no ...
... kind of interrupted , scattered , or subterranean thought is that it is an im- provement on the soliloquy . In King Lear Shakespeare might seem to have lost the faculty or inducement for the use of soliloquy , perhaps because he no ...
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