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Shakespeare, the comedies / R.P. Draper.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Analysing textsPublication details: New York : St. Martin's Press, 2000.Description: xii, 265 p. ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 0312227027
  • 0312227035 (pbk.)
Other title:
  • Shakespeare
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 822.33 D765s 2000 22
LOC classification:
  • PR2981 .D73 2000
Contents:
Pt. 1. Analysing Shakespeare's Comedies -- Introduction: The Nature of Shakespearean Comedy. 1. Atmospherics. 2. Sympathetic Criticism. 3. Illusion. 4. Romantic Sentiment. 5. Wooing. 6. Fools (1): Dupes. 7. Fools (2): Clever Fools. 8. Manlike Women. 9. Odd Men Out. 10. Set Pieces. 11. Endings. General Conclusions to Part 1 -- Pt. 2. The Context and the Critics. 12. The Other Comedies and the Poems. 13. Histories, Tragedies and Last Plays. 14. Theories of Comedy and Criticism of Shakespeare's Comedies.
Review: "Shakespeare's comedies are among the world's great celebrations of love and romance. But for Shakespeare, the trials and tribulations of love become a subject for both laughter and sympathy, presented in a dramatic form that combines such diverse elements as high poetic imagination, probingly intelligent criticism and uproariously farcical popular entertainment.".Summary: "This is the complex image that Shakespeare: The Comedies seeks to project for its readers through detailed analysis of extracts from the four major comedies. Readers are invited, however, to see for themselves what goes on in the plays: methods are explained and further work suggested, so that they can use the tools displayed in the analyses to pursue and develop their own insights.Summary: A final section relating the comedies to the rest of Shakespeare's work, outlining some theories of comedy and summarising the approaches of three modern critics, provides a context for more extended study of Shakespearean comedy."--BOOK JACKET.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Premier University Central Library 822.33 D765s 2000 1 Available 6112

Includes bibliographical references (p. 258-259) and index.

Pt. 1. Analysing Shakespeare's Comedies -- Introduction: The Nature of Shakespearean Comedy. 1. Atmospherics. 2. Sympathetic Criticism. 3. Illusion. 4. Romantic Sentiment. 5. Wooing. 6. Fools (1): Dupes. 7. Fools (2): Clever Fools. 8. Manlike Women. 9. Odd Men Out. 10. Set Pieces. 11. Endings. General Conclusions to Part 1 -- Pt. 2. The Context and the Critics. 12. The Other Comedies and the Poems. 13. Histories, Tragedies and Last Plays. 14. Theories of Comedy and Criticism of Shakespeare's Comedies.

"Shakespeare's comedies are among the world's great celebrations of love and romance. But for Shakespeare, the trials and tribulations of love become a subject for both laughter and sympathy, presented in a dramatic form that combines such diverse elements as high poetic imagination, probingly intelligent criticism and uproariously farcical popular entertainment.".

"This is the complex image that Shakespeare: The Comedies seeks to project for its readers through detailed analysis of extracts from the four major comedies. Readers are invited, however, to see for themselves what goes on in the plays: methods are explained and further work suggested, so that they can use the tools displayed in the analyses to pursue and develop their own insights.

A final section relating the comedies to the rest of Shakespeare's work, outlining some theories of comedy and summarising the approaches of three modern critics, provides a context for more extended study of Shakespearean comedy."--BOOK JACKET.

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