An essay on Shakespeare's relation to tradition / by Janet Spens.
Material type: TextPublication details: Oxford : B. H. Blackwell, 1916.Description: 102 p. ; 20 cmSubject(s):
Contents:
The effect of tradition in poetry.--Comedy: Types of comedy before Shakespeare. Evidence of the influence of Munday on Shakespeare leading up to Shakespeare's use of the folk-play. The traces of folk-plays in Shakespeare's drama.--Tragedy and conclusion: The Greek tragic hero. The pre-Shakespearean and Shakespearean tragic hero to the earliest Hamlet. Honour the subject of Elizabethan tragedy. Shakespeare's rejection of the superman. Post-Shakespearean tragedy still occupied with the same conception in a narrower form. The later Hamlet and King Lear. Conclusion: The individual is esentially tragic; consolation is only possible when we regard all life as one.
Item type | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Class number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books | VWML | Sharp Bequest | Off-site storage (3-4 working days needed to retrieve). | GN 65.2 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Reference only (3-4 working days notice needed. Contact a member of staff.) | 1562 |
The effect of tradition in poetry.--Comedy: Types of comedy before Shakespeare. Evidence of the influence of Munday on Shakespeare leading up to Shakespeare's use of the folk-play. The traces of folk-plays in Shakespeare's drama.--Tragedy and conclusion: The Greek tragic hero. The pre-Shakespearean and Shakespearean tragic hero to the earliest Hamlet. Honour the subject of Elizabethan tragedy. Shakespeare's rejection of the superman. Post-Shakespearean tragedy still occupied with the same conception in a narrower form. The later Hamlet and King Lear. Conclusion: The individual is esentially tragic; consolation is only possible when we regard all life as one.