Women and the English Renaissance: Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540-1620University of Illinois Press, 1986 - 364 ページ |
この書籍内から
検索結果1-3 / 33
260 ページ
... Cleopatra : both Webster and Shakespeare offer the audience a woman with all the antifeminist stereotypes on her head , who becomes a tragic hero . Defenders of women almost never got beyond contending that the old ugly charges were not ...
... Cleopatra : both Webster and Shakespeare offer the audience a woman with all the antifeminist stereotypes on her head , who becomes a tragic hero . Defenders of women almost never got beyond contending that the old ugly charges were not ...
294 ページ
... Cleopatra ; not despite his recognizing her extreme at- tractiveness ( the greatest accolades to Cleopatra's beauty and charm are his ) , but because he recognizes her extreme attractiveness . He dislikes her because he fears her : he ...
... Cleopatra ; not despite his recognizing her extreme at- tractiveness ( the greatest accolades to Cleopatra's beauty and charm are his ) , but because he recognizes her extreme attractiveness . He dislikes her because he fears her : he ...
295 ページ
... Cleopatra and women in general . He cannot know at first that his tone is inappropriate to Antony's present mood , but even after he is apprised of Fulvia's death he is not astute enough to sense Antony's new seriousness ; he continues ...
... Cleopatra and women in general . He cannot know at first that his tone is inappropriate to Antony's present mood , but even after he is apprised of Fulvia's death he is not astute enough to sense Antony's new seriousness ; he continues ...
他の版 - すべて表示
多く使われている語句
aggressive Agrippa antifeminism antifeminist Antony argues argument Arraignment behavior Book breeches Castiglione character classical Cleopatra contemporary Courtier courtly love CRUZ The University defense of women dialogue disguise drama Duchess Duchess of Malfi effeminacy effeminate Elyot's English Enobarbus Epicoene essay exempla female feminine feminism feminist formal attack formal controversy formal defense genre gossips Gosynhyll Gosynhyll's Haec-Vir hath haue Henry hermaphrodite hic mulier Honest Whore husband Jacobean Joseph Swetnam Lady literary London loue lover Lucrece lust maid male marriage marry masculine misogynist misogyny Mistress mulier Mulierum Pean nature paradox Patient Grissill Petrarchan play praise Queen Renaissance literature SANTA CRUZ satiric scene School House scold sexual Shakespeare shrew shrewishness slander Sowernam Speght stage misogynist stereotype suggests Swetnam the Woman-hater Taming thee Thomas thou tion tradition transvestism transvestite Tuvil University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA virago vpon whore widow wife wives woman womankind write