Julius CaesarPenguin UK, 7 d’abr. 2005 - 272 pàgines 'Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war, |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 5 de 35.
Pàgina
... politicians win and lose power according to their ability to inuence the Roman people with their rhetoric. Brutus the conspirator and Caesar the ruler whom he helps to assassinate both understand that, in politics, a course of action ...
... politicians win and lose power according to their ability to inuence the Roman people with their rhetoric. Brutus the conspirator and Caesar the ruler whom he helps to assassinate both understand that, in politics, a course of action ...
Pàgina
... his life, tries to get his own way. Politicians' speeches collapse not only under the weight of their own inherent overstatement or illogicality but also through their failure to misrepresent reality convincingly enough. Explaining his.
... his life, tries to get his own way. Politicians' speeches collapse not only under the weight of their own inherent overstatement or illogicality but also through their failure to misrepresent reality convincingly enough. Explaining his.
Pàgina
... political future but also in the play's management of its audience. So far we have witnessed rhetoric that is at best semi-public, directed at particular groups of people – petitioners, colleagues, potential enemies – rather than at a ...
... political future but also in the play's management of its audience. So far we have witnessed rhetoric that is at best semi-public, directed at particular groups of people – petitioners, colleagues, potential enemies – rather than at a ...
Pàgina
... political action: like the onstage audience, we listen and respond to what is being said; the staging makes us, as it were, honorary members of the crowd, bringing us to a new degree of engagement. But of course we are not really Roman ...
... political action: like the onstage audience, we listen and respond to what is being said; the staging makes us, as it were, honorary members of the crowd, bringing us to a new degree of engagement. But of course we are not really Roman ...
Pàgina
... political traditions. But the speech also distances Cassius more subtly, by inserting a sliver of irony between him and the Elizabethan audience: his words carry a meaning unintended by the character and irrelevant to the action, but ...
... political traditions. But the speech also distances Cassius more subtly, by inserting a sliver of irony between him and the Elizabethan audience: his words carry a meaning unintended by the character and irrelevant to the action, but ...
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action actor appear assassination audience battle bear better blood body Brutus called Capitol Casca Cassius cause characters Cinna comes common conspirators dangerous dead death Decius doth effect Elizabethan enemies Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fear fire Flavius friends give gods hand hath hear heart hold honour Italy Julius Caesar keep kill later leave lines live look lord Lucilius Lucius March Mark Antony matter meaning meet Messala mind moved murder nature never night noble Octavius offered once performance perhaps play PLEBEIAN Plutarch political Portia present reading reason reference rest Roman Rome scene Senate SERVANT Shakespeare sick soldiers speak speech spirit stage stand statue suggested sword tell theatre thee things thou Titinius took true turn unto wrong