Lectures on ShakespearePrinceton University Press, 8. okt. 2019 - 432 sider From one of the great modern writers, the acclaimed lectures in which he draws on a lifetime of experience to take the measure of Shakespeare's plays and sonnets |
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... thought that various scholarly labels of works of art should be taken “with a strong grain of salt, remembering that a work of art is not about this or that kind of life; it has life, drawn, certainly, from human experience but ...
... thought as well as to Shakespeare's. All lecturers would wish to have such a student. In the course of the lectures, Ansen became Auden's secretary and friend, and the notebooks also provide the record of Auden's conversation that has ...
... thought and an important commentary on Shakespeare's work. They vary in length and in the level of interest Auden took in different plays, but like all his work, they represent his own immensely spacious and integrated intellectual ...
... thought and verse. Auden, who also revered Dante, and for some of the same reasons, had far greater artistic charity. Auden's lectures on Julius Caesar and Antony and Cleopatra offer examples of the exceptional breadth of his religious ...
... thought it would have mounted” (Pt.3, V.vi.57, 61–62). In the same soliloquy, he also says that he has “neither pity, love, nor fear,” and proclaims that I have no brother, I am like no brother; And this word “love,” which greybeards ...
Indhold
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13 | |
The Comedy of Errors and The Two Gentlemen of Verona 23 | 23 |
Loves Labours Lost | 33 |
A Midsummer Nights Dream | 53 |
The Taming of the Shrew King John and Richard II | 63 |
Henry IV Parts One and Two and Henry V | 101 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor | 124 |
Alls Well That Ends Well | 181 |
Antony and Cleopatra | 231 |
Timon of Athens | 255 |
Pericles and Cymbeline | 270 |
Concluding Lecture | 308 |
APPENDIX I | 321 |
Fall Term Final Examination | 341 |
Audens Markings in Kittredge | 347 |