Shakespeare's Dramatic Challenge: On the Rise of Shakespeare's Tragic HeroesFirst published in 2002. This is the Volume III of the five G. Wilson Knight collected works series and focuses on Shakespeare’s tragic heroes for his early to later tragedies or Timon of Athens, Anthony and Cleopatra and Coriolanus. This book has grown from Knight’s dramatic recital 'Shakespeare's Dramatic Challenge', and therefore includes a prefatory note on his stage experience. The complete record, with illustrations, has already been documented in Shakespearian Production (enlarged 1964), but a rather more personal account is offered here. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 87
Page 5
... 2 Early Tragedy 3 On Poetic Acting 4 Transition 5 The Famous Tragedies 6 Timon of Athens 7 The Last Phase Part 2 : The Performances Appendix : Granville - Barker and Beerbohm Tree Index 12 13 17 19 21 47 61 75 113 147 149 167 177.
... 2 Early Tragedy 3 On Poetic Acting 4 Transition 5 The Famous Tragedies 6 Timon of Athens 7 The Last Phase Part 2 : The Performances Appendix : Granville - Barker and Beerbohm Tree Index 12 13 17 19 21 47 61 75 113 147 149 167 177.
Page
... poetic correspondents are handled in masterly fashion and the artistry is on occasion superb. We have here as deep a study of evil as could well be offered without reliance on supernatural categories. Evil is in part caused by ...
... poetic correspondents are handled in masterly fashion and the artistry is on occasion superb. We have here as deep a study of evil as could well be offered without reliance on supernatural categories. Evil is in part caused by ...
Page 19
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Page 20
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Page 21
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acting action actor addresses advance appears aware Barker becomes better blood body character comes courage death dramatic earth effect evil exist experience expression eyes fall fear feel final fire follows friends gesture give given gods gold Hamlet hand hath head hear heart heaven Henry heroes human imaginative important killed King Knight later Lear less light lines live look Macbeth magic means mind murder nature needed never once Othello performance perhaps play poetic poetry present Production reading recital regarded Richard rise Romeo scene sense Shakespeare Shakespearian sleep soliloquy soul speaks speech spoken stage story suffering suggests Theatre thee things thou thought Timon of Athens Titus tragedy tragic tragic heroes Tree true truth turn University usual voice whole writing