Shakespeare's Verse: Iambic Pentameter and the Poet's IdiosyncrasiesP. Lang, 1987 - 383 sayfa This book presents a magisterial linguistic-metrical study of Shakespeare's verse in the context of the English poetic tradition. Marina Tarlinskaja concentrates on the correlation between phrasal stresses and the iambic metrical scheme and goes on to explore links between meter, grammar and semantics. Her exhaustive statistical analysis helps to define minute idiosyncrasies of Shakespeare's particular type of iambic pentameter, shedding new light on the problem of chronology and authorship. Tarlinskaja also studies Shakespeare's use of verse rhythm for expressive purposes, e.g. to oppose character types. The book will interest not only students of Shakespeare and literary theory, but also people such as theatre directors and actors interested in Shakespeare's own interpretation of his dramatis personae. |
Sık kullanılan terimler ve kelime öbekleri
accentual acts adjectives adverb alliteration analysis attributive authors beginning break Byron caused Cenci Chapter characteristics characters combinations comedies compared components considered contain correlation death display disyllabic dramas earlier element enclitic enclitic phrases endings English English iambic epoch evolution example feminine figure SW-1 figure WS-2 final Fletcher four frequent function genres grammatical groups hand Henry VIII iambic pentameter ictic stress ictus increased indices King later less Lucrece marked meaning meter metrical modified monosyllabic monosyllables motion non-ictic nouns occur Othello particularly patterns period phrases plays poem poets position preceding predicate probably proclitic proportion prose relatively rhythm rhythmical figures Richard rigid Russian scenes seems semantic Sh.RII Sh.Son Shakespeare's Shel.RI Sonnets specific speech stress profiles strong strongly structure style stylistic sweet syllabic syntactic Table Tarlinskaja thou types typical unstressed usually utterances variant verbs verse whole words