000 02080nam a22002774a 4500
001 991004457689706706
003 ES-BaIT
005 20240314130414.0
008 920217s1986 xxk|||||| |00| ||eng|c
020 _a0521304237
_q(hard cover)
020 _a0521316901
_q(paperback)
035 _a(ES-BaCBU).b10961690
035 _a(OCoLC)802425112
040 _aES-BaCBU
_bcat
_cES-BaCBU
080 _a820-2"15"Shakespeare, William.09
100 1 _aMehl, Dieter
_9163327
245 1 0 _aShakespeare's tragedies :
_ban introduction /
_cDieter Mehl
260 _aCambridge, [etc.] :
_bCambridge University Press,
_c1986
300 _aX, 272 p. ;
_c24 cm
500 _aReimpressions: 1988
504 _aBibliografia
520 _a"This book introduces the students and the general reader to Shakespeare's tragedies and to the problems of interpreting them. Traditional questions and answers regarding the texts, as well as their realization in performance, are examined, and it is shown how the plays do not offer easy of final solutions to the tragic dilemmas presented, but engage the reader and spectator in a debate with more than one possible outcome. Each of the tragedies (Titus Andronicus, Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth, Julius Caesar, Antony and Cleopatra, Coriolanus, Timos of Athens, and Troilus and Cressida) is examined separately, with discussions of its provenance, its stage history and critical history, and of the problems associated with its categorization as part of the 'tragic' genre. He refers widely to a representative body of Shakespearian criticism, and provides a useful bibliography which indicates the best sources for a reader wishing to pursue individual themes further. The book is carefully written and should serve as a valuable introduction for anyone wanting to gain a sense of the richness of the plays and the diversity of debate and interpretation that has surrounded them." – Contracoberta
600 0 _aShakespeare, William,
_d1564-1616
_xTragèdies
_2lemac
_996711
908 _aUAB
_aCDMAE
942 _2udc
_c1
999 _c134858
_d134858