Sovereign Shame: A Study of King LearBucknell University Press, 1984 - 210 This study of King Lear emphasizes the fact that Cordelia Kent, and the Fool create a loving community from which Lear persistently flees, and seeks to explain his bizarre behavior not, as is sometimes done, by attributing unconscious incestuous desires to him, but by demonstrating that Lear's profound and tyrannizing shame originates in his metaphysical dread of personal worthlessness and a deep sense of being unworthy of love. |
Spis treści
17 | |
The Pastoral Norm | 58 |
The Player King | 118 |
The Prince of Darkness is a Gentleman | 147 |
Notes | 176 |
194 | |
207 | |
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abdication acknowledge Albany Alfred Harbage attempt Avoidance of Love banished beggar behavior better bitter fool Cavell character charity claims codpiece contempt Cordelia critics curse daugh daughters death disguise distracted dramatic dramatic irony dreadful Edgar Edmund Essay on King evil fact father fear feel final flees folly Fool's foolish forgiveness generosity Gloucester Gloucester's gods Goneril and Regan grace grief heart heavens hidden hope human humiliation irony Jacobean justice Kent Kent's King Lear king's Lear plays Lear's live love test madness Masks of King merely metaphor miseries moral nature nonetheless O. B. Hardison Oswald Othello pastoral pastoral's play play's Poor Poor Tom pretense Princeton University Princeton University Press rage refusal remarks reveals ridicule risk scene seek sense Shakespeare Shakespearean Tragedy shame sorrow speaks speech stand Stanley Cavell storm suffering suggests symbolic thee thing thou tion tragic true truth words wretches
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Strona 26 - And my poor fool is hang'd! No, no, no life! Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life, And thou no breath at all? Thou'lt come no more, Never, never, never, never, never!