Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, 第 40 巻Gale Research Company, 1984 |
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... exchange is now com- plete . She remarks below : " I have not yet / Enter'd my house " ( V.i.272-73 , emphasis mine ) . She has , how- ever , established her possession of it , and of Bassanio , and her absolute mastery of the systems ...
... exchange is now com- plete . She remarks below : " I have not yet / Enter'd my house " ( V.i.272-73 , emphasis mine ) . She has , how- ever , established her possession of it , and of Bassanio , and her absolute mastery of the systems ...
209 ページ
... exchange in Shake- speare's play , I would like to look in some detail at the status of exchange in anthropology . In his Essai sur le don , Marcel Mauss describes and analyzes one of the most remarkable features of primitive societies ...
... exchange in Shake- speare's play , I would like to look in some detail at the status of exchange in anthropology . In his Essai sur le don , Marcel Mauss describes and analyzes one of the most remarkable features of primitive societies ...
210 ページ
... exchange - within which the various forms of the traffic in women take place . " 12 The Merchant of Venice would seem to offer an exem- plary case not only of Lévi - Strauss's exchange system but also of the French feminist critique of ...
... exchange - within which the various forms of the traffic in women take place . " 12 The Merchant of Venice would seem to offer an exem- plary case not only of Lévi - Strauss's exchange system but also of the French feminist critique of ...
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action actor Antonio appears argues audience Bassanio become begins bond calls castration characters choice Christian circumcision claims Cleopatra comedies comic conventional course critics daughter death describes desire discussion disguise Elizabethan essay example exchange father fear feel female feminine figure final flesh gender give hand heart hero heroines human husband identity interest John kind Lady less lines live London look lover Macbeth male marriage masculine means Merchant of Venice moral mother nature never offers person play plot poems political Portia possible present Press reading refer relations relationship rhetorical ring role Rosalind says scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare Shylock social sonnets speak speech spirit stage suggests tell thing thou tion tragedy true turn University wife woman women York young