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    The Winter's Tale (The New Cambridge Shakespeare) -

    William Shakespeare

    Cambridge University Press
    2007
    308 páginas
    10h 16m
    ISBN-13: 9780521293730
    3.7
    15 avaliações
    Leram15Lendo0Querem7Relendo0Abandonos0Resenhas4
    Favoritos0Desejados7Avaliaram15

    The New Cambridge Shakespeare appeals to students worldwide for its up-to-date scholarship and emphasis on performance. The series features line-by-line commentaries and textual notes on the plays and poems and an extensive introduction. The Winter's Tale is one of Shakespeare's most varied, theatrically self-conscious, and emotionally wide-ranging plays. Much of the play's copiousness inheres in its generic intermingling of tragedy, comedy, romance, pastoral, and the history play. In addition to dates and sources, the introduction attends to iterative patterns, the nature and cause of Leontes' jealousy, the staging and meaning of the bear episode, and the thematic and structural implications of the figure of Time. Special attention is paid to the ending and its tempered happiness. Performance history is integrated throughout the introduction and commentary. Appendices include the theatrical practice of doubling.

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    ricardo marçal picture
    ricardo marçal27/07/2020Resenhou um livro
    5 (Perfeito)

    "After the aesthetic self-wounding of 'Cymbeline', 'The Winter's Tale' surges with Shakespeare's full power, though changed altogether from any of its earlier displays. (...) Leontes, nothing himself (as he secretly fears), beholds what is not there, as well as the nothing that is. Shakespeare's winter's tale gives us a mind of winter unable to cease its reductions until the deaths of others shock it back to reality. (...) Whether or not there is repressed homosexuality in Leonte's aberration, the principal clue to us for the king's jealous madness is the idea of tyranny, which is the judgment of Leonte's courtiers, and of the oracle of Apollo at Delphos: 'Hermione is chaste; Polixenes blameless; Camillo a true subject; Leontes a jealous tyrant; his innocent babe truly begotten; and the king shall live without an heir; if that which is lost be not found' [III.ii.132-36]" Harold Bloom: Shakespeare - The Invention of the Human, c. 32

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    3.7 / 15
    • 5 estrelas33%
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