"All the World's a Stage": Dramatic Sensibility in Mary Shelley's NovelsPsychology Press, 2002 - 212 sayfa This book examines the often tragic and nearly always disabling metaphor of thetheatrum mundi, world-as-stage, as it plays itself out in the characters of Mary Shelley's novels. |
İçindekiler
Frankenstein Storytelling as Dramatic Performance | 35 |
Mathilda Life as Theatrical Production | 61 |
The Last Man Autobiography as Drama | 85 |
Valperga Theatrical Plots and Dramatic Intrigue | 109 |
Perkin Warbeck Problematic Roles and Identities | 131 |
Lodore Public Spectacle and Private Lives | 151 |
Falkner The Illusion of Romance | 167 |
Conclusion | 181 |
205 | |
Diğer baskılar - Tümünü görüntüle
'All the World's a Stage': Dramatic Sensibility in Mary Shelley's Novels Charlene Bunnell Sınırlı önizleme - 2013 |
'All the World's a Stage': Dramatic Sensibility in Mary Shelley's Novels Charlene Bunnell Sınırlı önizleme - 2013 |
Sık kullanılan terimler ve kelime öbekleri
action actor Adrian Alithea audience Beatrice become Castruccio characters cited in text Clerval conventions Cornelia create creature daughter death demonstrates depict desire Despite domestic dream egocentric Elizabeth emotions England Ethel Euthanasia Fairleigh Dickinson University Falkner fame fate father feel fiction first-person narratives frame tale Frion Gerard Godwin Gothic fiction Gothic novels hereafter cited hero heroine human illusion imagination Joanna Baillie Journals Katherine Lady Santerre Last letter Lionel Verney literary lives Lodore Lodore's London Mary Shelley Mary Wollstonecraft mask Mathilda melodramatic Monina mother narrative narrator novel obsession passion perceive Percy Shelley Perdita performance Perkin Warbeck play public stage Raymond reality recognizes reveals Richard role Romantic Romanticism scene sensibility Shakespeare Shelley's social spectators spotlight story Sunstein sympathy tale tells theater theatrical theatrum mundi motif tion tragedy tragic Tripalda University Press Valperga Victor Frankenstein Walton William William Godwin Wollstonecraft Woodville words writes York Yorkists