The ethic of love and marriage in Shakespeare's early comedies
Association of Commonwealth Universities, British Council
Association of Commonwealth Universities, British Council
ABSTRACT In the Renaissance, religious and political confrontations generated an intensified awareness of the self which marks a decisive phase in the evolution of human personality, whose study may be entitled Historical Psychology. Alienation from religious and political strife turned the interests of Petrarch and Montaigne toward their own minds...
ABSTRACT In the Renaissance, religious and political confrontations generated an intensified awareness of the self which marks a decisive phase in the evolution of human personality, whose study may be entitled Historical Psychology. Alienation from religious and political strife turned the interests of Petrarch and Montaigne toward their own minds...
ABSTRACT In the Renaissance, religious and political confrontations generated an intensified awareness of the self which marks a decisive phase in the evolution of human personality, whose study may be entitled Historical Psychology. Alienation from religious and political strife turned the interests of Petrarch and Montaigne toward their own minds...
ABSTRACT In the Renaissance, religious and political confrontations generated an intensified awareness of the self which marks a decisive phase in the evolution of human personality, whose study may be entitled Historical Psychology. Alienation from religious and political strife turned the interests of Petrarch and Montaigne toward their own minds...
ABSTRACT In the Renaissance, religious and political confrontations generated an intensified awareness of the self which marks a decisive phase in the evolution of human personality, whose study may be entitled Historical Psychology. Alienation from religious and political strife turned the interests of Petrarch and Montaigne ...
Analyses the debate over flowers between Perdita and Polixenes in Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale as concerned with the themes of time and mortality.
Considers The Franklin's Tale by Chaucer as a possible source for Shakespeare's play The Tempest, with special attention to the role of the magician in both works.