Women and the English Renaissance: Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540 to 1620University of Illinois Press, 1984 - 364 ページ Impressively examines the relation sixteenth-century controversies about the nature of women have to literature and life. |
この書籍内から
検索結果1-3 / 38
248 ページ
... turns with vicious ingratitude on the duke's son ( who spared her while she was in his power ) and gets him condemned to death for treason , abets the duke in his plan to execute his daughter ( ironically enough ) for marrying beneath ...
... turns with vicious ingratitude on the duke's son ( who spared her while she was in his power ) and gets him condemned to death for treason , abets the duke in his plan to execute his daughter ( ironically enough ) for marrying beneath ...
282 ページ
... turns against women when his wife seeks a divorce , Posthumus in Cymbeline and Zuccone in The Fawn when they believe their wives unfaithful , the heroes of Beau- mont and Fletcher's Philaster and of Greene's Orlando Furioso when they ...
... turns against women when his wife seeks a divorce , Posthumus in Cymbeline and Zuccone in The Fawn when they believe their wives unfaithful , the heroes of Beau- mont and Fletcher's Philaster and of Greene's Orlando Furioso when they ...
283 ページ
... turn misogynist ; this is specifically iden- tified as a sour grapes attitude : “ The Foxe will eat no grapes , and why ? ” ( Fair Em , Sig . F3 ) . Hamlet turns misogynist through disappointment with one woman ; his mother's " o ...
... turn misogynist ; this is specifically iden- tified as a sour grapes attitude : “ The Foxe will eat no grapes , and why ? ” ( Fair Em , Sig . F3 ) . Hamlet turns misogynist through disappointment with one woman ; his mother's " o ...
他の版 - すべて表示
多く使われている語句
acted aggressive Agrippa appears argues argument attack become behavior believe Book called chapter character charges classical Cleopatra contemporary convention created criticism death defense discussion disguise domineering drama early English Epigrams equality essay example fact Fair fear female feminine feminist figure formal controversy give gossips Gosynhyll Grissill hand hath haue Henry House human husband Jacobean John keep kind King Lady least less literary literature living London lover lust maid male marriage marry masculine military mind misogynist misogyny mother nature never notes play praise published Queen question readers reason Renaissance rhetorical satiric scene School sexual Shakespeare shows shrew slander society sometimes stage stereotype story suggests Swetnam Thomas thou tion tongue tradition true turns whore widow wife wives woman women write