King LearThomas Nelson and Sons, 1997 - 437 sider In this edition, R.A. Foakes brings to bear a number of historical perspectives and critically addresses recent explorations of King Lear as a play of redemption, a play of despair and a play that destabilizes all commentary. Included is a composite text of Quarto and Folio versions, which allows readers to make their own editorial judgements. |
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Side 45
... seen as reflecting a transition from an old order to a new one . Much depends , then , on how this tran- sition is envisaged . It can be seen as showing a beneficent old order , to which Edgar is linked , associated with Nature in its ...
... seen as reflecting a transition from an old order to a new one . Much depends , then , on how this tran- sition is envisaged . It can be seen as showing a beneficent old order , to which Edgar is linked , associated with Nature in its ...
Side 81
... seen as the ' pilgrimage ' of Lear . Bradley went so far as to propose as a title for the play ' The Redemption of King Lear ' , arguing that the gods ' lead him to attain through apparently hopeless failure the very end and aim of life ...
... seen as the ' pilgrimage ' of Lear . Bradley went so far as to propose as a title for the play ' The Redemption of King Lear ' , arguing that the gods ' lead him to attain through apparently hopeless failure the very end and aim of life ...
Side 137
... seen as a sharp , mature professional , deliberately needling Lear , and as a voice of social protest in the play . The Fool's later scenes , in Acts 2 and 3 , develop this second range of possibilities , but small additions in F still ...
... seen as a sharp , mature professional , deliberately needling Lear , and as a voice of social protest in the play . The Fool's later scenes , in Acts 2 and 3 , develop this second range of possibilities , but small additions in F still ...
Indhold
Two textual problems | 393 |
Lineation | 403 |
Abbreviations and references | 416 |
Copyright | |
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action actors Adrian Noble Albany Albany's Ard² audience bastard Blayney blind Bratton Brownlow Burgundy Cam² Capell Cordelia Cornwall daughters death Dent disguised Duke Duke of Cornwall echo Edgar edited Edmund Enter Exeunt Exit eyes father Folio text follow Fool Fool's foul papers Gentleman give Gloucester Gloucester's gods Goneril and Regan Harsnett hath heart Holinshed Hunter i'the idea Introduction Kent Kent's King Lear King of France kingdom knights Lear's Leir letter line Q lord madam meaning nature noble nuncle o'the omitted opening scene Oswald Paul Scofield perhaps play Poor Poor Tom Pope printed prose Q Q and F Q lines Q SD Quarto reference role Rosenberg royal royal plural Royal Shakespeare Theatre seems sense servant Shakespeare sister speak speech stage storm suggests textual notes Theatre thee Theobald thine thou tion verse words