The Cambridge Companion to Shakespearean ComedyAlexander Leggatt This introduction examines the continuity and variety of Shakepeare's work and the creative use he made of his inherited conventions. The first section places Shakespeare in the context of classical and Renaissance comedy, his Elizabethan predecessors and the traditions of popular festivity. The second section traces themes through Shakespeare's early and middle comedies, dark comedies and late romances, illuminating particular plays by close analysis, |
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Page 137
... social norms , has accentuated the im- portance of the Hobbesian . If , as I have shown , the " otherness " even of such characters is itself unstable and insecure , then we may safely conclude that a pure laughter of social derision ...
... social norms , has accentuated the im- portance of the Hobbesian . If , as I have shown , the " otherness " even of such characters is itself unstable and insecure , then we may safely conclude that a pure laughter of social derision ...
Page 162
... social agents - playing out their own struggle for superiority and distinction - are themselves , in Pierre Bourdieu's words , " producers " of " acts of classification , " 11 makers of social division . In Love's Labor's Lost the quest ...
... social agents - playing out their own struggle for superiority and distinction - are themselves , in Pierre Bourdieu's words , " producers " of " acts of classification , " 11 makers of social division . In Love's Labor's Lost the quest ...
Page 174
... social life of discourse . But Bakhtin's probing analysis of the qualities of ev- eryday social discourse can help us to see how the literary and the social are in fact working together here . For Bakhtin , a person's speech is not ...
... social life of discourse . But Bakhtin's probing analysis of the qualities of ev- eryday social discourse can help us to see how the literary and the social are in fact working together here . For Bakhtin , a person's speech is not ...
Contents
Roman comedy | 18 |
Italian stories on the stage | 32 |
JANETTE DILLON | 47 |
Copyright | |
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action actor Antipholus audience Barabas Benedick Berowne boy player Caliban Cambridge Companion Cambridge University Press characters classical Claudio clown Comedy of Errors commedia confusion court courtship critics cross-dressed Cymbeline death disguise dramatic Duke early modern edited Elizabethan England English Falstaff Friar Ganymed gender genre Gentlemen of Verona heroines human identity Isabella Italian joke Jonson Katherina King language laughter literary London Love's Labor's Lost lovers Lyly Lyly's male Malvolio marriage Measure for Measure Merchant of Venice Merry Wives Midsummer Night's Dream mocked moral narrative Olivia Orlando Orsino Oxford pastoral performance Pericles Petruchio Plautus play play's playwrights plot Portia Posthumus Prospero Renaissance rhetorical role Roman comedy romance Rosalind scene Sebastian sexual Shakespeare Shakespeare's comic Shakespearean comedy Shrew Shylock social speech stage story Taming Tempest Terence theatre theatregrams theatrical thou tion tradition tragedy turn Twelfth Night Viola Winter's Tale woman women words