In the Posture of a Whore: Changing Attitudes to 'bad' Women in Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama, Volume 2 |
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Page 207
... society to the old woman , destroys her and moves on to exploit other situations . Frank , who is uncomplicatedly sinful , repents and is forgiven ; his death is within the pale of the Church and society ( he is guilty only of bigamy ...
... society to the old woman , destroys her and moves on to exploit other situations . Frank , who is uncomplicatedly sinful , repents and is forgiven ; his death is within the pale of the Church and society ( he is guilty only of bigamy ...
Page 348
... society which produced the drama , just as we can move ' inward ' from the society to the drama which , in some way , reflects that society . So long , in any case , as we are concerned with the valuation and the reading , the ...
... society which produced the drama , just as we can move ' inward ' from the society to the drama which , in some way , reflects that society . So long , in any case , as we are concerned with the valuation and the reading , the ...
Page 388
... Society : A Theoretical Overview , " ed . Michelle Z. Rosaldo and Louise Lamphere , Woman , Culture , and Society . Stanford , 1974 . Rosen , Barbara , ed . Wtichcraft . 1969 . Rowbotham , Sheila . Women , Resistance and Revolution ...
... Society : A Theoretical Overview , " ed . Michelle Z. Rosaldo and Louise Lamphere , Woman , Culture , and Society . Stanford , 1974 . Rosen , Barbara , ed . Wtichcraft . 1969 . Rowbotham , Sheila . Women , Resistance and Revolution ...
Common terms and phrases
action Amazon ambiguity Antony appears associated attitude beauty becomes Bowers Caesar called Cambridge cause characters Christian claim Cleopatra comedy comic concerned condemned considered conventional created Cressida dangerous death defined depicted desire drama effect Elizabeth Elizabethan emphasises encouraged England English evil female final Fletcher George Helen helps Henry Heywood honour husband idea imagination important individual instance John kill kind King Lady Macbeth less lover lust Macbeth male marriage Mary merely Middleton moral murder nature Noble Oxford Paris partly pattern perhaps play political potentially presented provides punished Queen relation remains Renaissance represented revenge Robert role Roman rprt rule satiric scene seems seen sense sexual Shakespeare shows Sisters social society stage Studies suggests Thomas tradition Tragedy translated Troilus Troy ultimately virtuous Waller whore wife witchcraft witches woman women York