The Soul of Athens: Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's DreamThe Soul of Athens: Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream" studies Shakespeare's portrayal of the founding of Athens through a close reading of one of the Bard's most memorable comedies. Coupling careful attention to detail with interpretive breadth, The Soul of Athens examines the nature of love, the natural doubleness of human thinking and the ambiguous relation of image and reality, as well as patriarchy and democracy, and heroic and moral virtue. |
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Page 4
... players ' view of their art . The close connections between art and love , reason and passion , are cen- tral not only to Athens , but to the premodern conception of the human soul . Since early modernity , philosophers have tended to ...
... players ' view of their art . The close connections between art and love , reason and passion , are cen- tral not only to Athens , but to the premodern conception of the human soul . Since early modernity , philosophers have tended to ...
Page 7
... player fitted " ; " For Pyramus therein doth kill himself , / Which when I saw rehearsed " ; " It is not for you ; I have heard it over " ( 5.1.64-65 , 67-68 , 77 ) . Philostrate's re- peated claim , which seems wholly unnecessary to ...
... player fitted " ; " For Pyramus therein doth kill himself , / Which when I saw rehearsed " ; " It is not for you ; I have heard it over " ( 5.1.64-65 , 67-68 , 77 ) . Philostrate's re- peated claim , which seems wholly unnecessary to ...
Page 44
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Page 45
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Page 48
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accuses action actors Apollodorus appear Aristotle artisans asks Athenian Athens Athens's audience awake beauty Bottom Cadmus characters comedy confusion Coriolanus Cupid dance death Demetrius Demetrius's describes desire despite doth double dramatic Egeus Egeus's eyes fairies father fear flee flower hate hath hear heart Helena Hermia Hippolyta hounds imagination imitation kill lion literally look love juice love's Lysander Lysander and Demetrius Lysander's marry means mentions Metamorphoses metaphor Midsummer Night's Dream mock moon Moonshine never night Oberon once Ovid passion Philostrate play play's players Plutarch poetry Prologue Puck Puck's Pyramus and Thisbe Pyramus's Quince Quince's reason rehearsal says scene seems sense Shakespeare sight sing sleep Snout Snug song soul speaks speech Starveling suggests sweet tells Thebes thee Theseus Theseus's things Thisbe's thou tion Titania tragedy true love turns Unlike vows wall wants wedding women wonder woods word young lovers