Special Section, Shakespeare and Montaigne RevisitedGraham Bradshaw, T. G. Bishop, Peter Holbrook Ashgate, 2006 - 405 pages This year including a special section on "Shakespeare and Montaigne Revisited," The Shakespearean International Yearbook continues to provide an annual survey of important issues and developments in contemporary Shakespeare studies. Contributors to this issue come from the US and the UK, Canada, Sweden, Japan and Australia. This issue includes an interview with veteran American actor Alvin Epstein during his recent acclaimed performance of King Lear for the Actors' Shakespeare project in Boston. |
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Page 259
... cultural community . " 19 Arendt was doubly " counter - cultural " : resolutely opposed to the normative acculturation repre- sented by assimilation to Gentile standards of society , but also against the cultural fetishism symbolized by ...
... cultural community . " 19 Arendt was doubly " counter - cultural " : resolutely opposed to the normative acculturation repre- sented by assimilation to Gentile standards of society , but also against the cultural fetishism symbolized by ...
Page 281
... cultural distinction in the presentation of politically dis- enfranchised cultural groups common in sixteenth - century English print . As Bernhard Klein shows , such reductive abstraction is a prominent feature of early modern ...
... cultural distinction in the presentation of politically dis- enfranchised cultural groups common in sixteenth - century English print . As Bernhard Klein shows , such reductive abstraction is a prominent feature of early modern ...
Page 315
... cultural influence among the barbari- ans . Roman cultural hegemony is strong enough to make the hostile barbarians institutionalize the education of Latin . The barbarians in Titus Andronicus are not content only with speaking Latin ...
... cultural influence among the barbari- ans . Roman cultural hegemony is strong enough to make the hostile barbarians institutionalize the education of Latin . The barbarians in Titus Andronicus are not content only with speaking Latin ...
Contents
A Case Study | 21 |
Montaigne Shakespeare | 37 |
Suspicion and Belief in Shakespeares Early Comedies | 56 |
Copyright | |
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Aaron Alvin Epstein argues Cambridge University Press Cavell character Christian citizenship Clarendon Comedy Comedy of Errors contemporary Coriolanus critical cruelty cultural Cypriot Cyprus Demetrius discourse drama early modern edited Elizabethan emancipation England English Renaissance Essays example exemplarity Florio gender Goths Grady Greek Hamlet Hannah Arendt human Ibid idea identity Ireland Japanese Jewish Jews John King Lear language Latin Lavinia literary Literature London Macbeth Martinengo Merchant of Venice Michel Michel de Montaigne misogyny Montaigne and Shakespeare Montaigne's moral nature Odashima Othello Oxford philosophical play's political Pyrrhonian Pyrrhonism question reading religious rhetorical rhythm Roman Rome Routledge says scene scepticism Semiramis sense Sextus Sextus Empiricus sexual Shakespeare and Montaigne Shakespeare's plays Shylock social speech Stanford Studies suggests Tamora theater things thought Timon of Athens tion Titus Andronicus tradition Tragedy tragic translation truth Tsubouchi Venetian William William Shakespeare Wittgenstein women words writing York