Women and the English Renaissance: Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540-1620 |
この書籍内から
検索結果1-3 / 23
51 ページ
[ 1 Henry IV , V.i. 140-142 ] ) , but concentrating on slander itself distracted attention from legal inequities , social prejudice , and a host of other problems more serious for women than antifeminist insults .
[ 1 Henry IV , V.i. 140-142 ] ) , but concentrating on slander itself distracted attention from legal inequities , social prejudice , and a host of other problems more serious for women than antifeminist insults .
288 ページ
1608–10 , slander women ; Aurea in Heywood's The Silver Age , acted ca. 1611 , slanders a man ; Leonora in The Devil's Law - Case , acted ca. ... The prototype is the biblical Susanna story , where the virtuous heroine is slandered ...
1608–10 , slander women ; Aurea in Heywood's The Silver Age , acted ca. 1611 , slanders a man ; Leonora in The Devil's Law - Case , acted ca. ... The prototype is the biblical Susanna story , where the virtuous heroine is slandered ...
298 ページ
Joyce H. Sexton in The Slandered Woman in Shakespeare discusses the slanderer but , disappointingly , not the slandered woman : that is , she attempts no explanation of the fact that in Shakespeare's four main plots turning upon slander ...
Joyce H. Sexton in The Slandered Woman in Shakespeare discusses the slanderer but , disappointingly , not the slandered woman : that is , she attempts no explanation of the fact that in Shakespeare's four main plots turning upon slander ...
レビュー - レビューを書く
レビューが見つかりませんでした。
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 CALIFORNIA CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ called chapter character charges classical Cleopatra contemporary convention created CRUZ CRUZ UNIVERSITY death defense discussion domineering drama early English epigram equality essay example fact Fair fear female feminine figure formal controversy give gossips Gosynhyll Grissill hand hath haue House human husband Jacobean keep kind Lady least less literary literature living lover lust maid male marriage marry masculine military mind misogynist misogyny mother nature never notes play praise Queen question readers reason remarks Renaissance rhetorical SANTA satiric scene School sexual Shakespeare shows shrew slander sometimes stage stereotype story suggests Swetnam thou tion tradition true turns University Library whore widow wife wives woman women write