This paper examines "Shakespeare's Contemporaries" edited by Max Bluestone and Norman Rabkin.
Book Review # 101129 |
903 words (
approx. 3.6 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2008
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Abstract
The paper discusses "Shakespeare's Contemporaries", a collection of critical essays on Elizabethan drama. The paper focuess on the essays pertaining to Marlowe's "Dr. Faustus". The paper also argues with Alfred Harbage's introduction, which claims that Elizabethan criticism of popular Elizabethan drama does not exist.
From the Paper
"The essays pertaining to Marlowe's Dr. Faustus written by Arthur Mizener and W. W. Greg are asking for a re-reading of the play in order to talk about it and teach it. They defend Marlowe's use of language by criticizing essayist Charles Lamb's comments of the early 1800s that Marlowe was a poet. They address the critical complaint that once Dr. Faustus has the power he demands, he gives in to it too easily and goes to hell. They defend that Marlowe did that purposely in order to show the betrayal of ideals. "But the logical outline is there, and I must differ from Marlowe's critics, and believe that when he sketched that outline Marlowe knew what he was about." (p 97 Greg essay). Although Dr. Faustus has given in to the power of Lucifer, his decline is slow as he questions the existence of hell, "I think hell is a fable," (Act II scene I l128)."
Tags:Dr., Faustus, Marlowe, criticism, critics, playwrights, essays
An analysis of the themes of ghosts, time, memory and trauma in Toni Morrison's "Beloved".
Book Review # 104606 |
1,814 words (
approx. 7.3 pages ) |
5 sources |
MLA | 2008
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$ 34.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses how Toni Morrison's "Beloved" offers sometimes confusing allegories stressing the power of the past over what may be bizarre events of the present and future. The paper also examines the ghost in the story, called "Beloved", and how the power of Beloved can be seen in how it forces attention to the past in those who need to exhume it and that whatever or whomever Beloved was, she had worked a kind of magic in evoking the deepest feelings of those with whom she insisted on living. The paper concludes that the surviving adults in the novel must make an effort to overcome their pasts, realizing they are past what harmed them, and transform themselves.
Outline:
124 Bluestone Road, Cincinnati
Beloved
From the Paper
" At the beginning of Beloved, Morrison commented that Paul D had read of an incident in Cincinnati involving a slave woman who killed one of her children when her owner caught up with her, an example of the way in which Morrison added details in a matter of fact way that leaves the reader to knit together the story as he or she will. The manner in which characters arrive and leave is part of Morrison's able way of suggesting fluid time and how characters are often distracted by matters not of the immediate present. For instance, Sethe's son's, Howard and Buglar, ran away in 1873 after years of life with phenomena that made the household a misery. (Beloved 272) As for Paul D, upon his arrival he comes to terms with an obviously haunted house. "
Tags:sethe, Bluestone, Road, Concluding, Discussion