Discourse on Hamlet and Hamlet: A Psychoanalytic InquiryInternational Universities Press, 1971 - 656 pagina's |
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Pagina 10
... audience at all , it was that intersection that was his only concern . If he succeeded in arousing strong emotions when the words of the play impinged upon the listener's sense organs , then he could be sure that he had done what needed ...
... audience at all , it was that intersection that was his only concern . If he succeeded in arousing strong emotions when the words of the play impinged upon the listener's sense organs , then he could be sure that he had done what needed ...
Pagina 18
... audience . " Whatever can then be said about a cultural product is to take in nothing but the nature of the human mind's re- sponse to it . While I am here vulgarizing a highly sophisticated view , I am trying to defend the eighteenth ...
... audience . " Whatever can then be said about a cultural product is to take in nothing but the nature of the human mind's re- sponse to it . While I am here vulgarizing a highly sophisticated view , I am trying to defend the eighteenth ...
Pagina 193
... audience , just as it is legitimate to try to reconstruct the meaning that it might have had to a Restoration audience or to any other historical audience . But to imply that Shakespeare's own audience came closer than could any other ...
... audience , just as it is legitimate to try to reconstruct the meaning that it might have had to a Restoration audience or to any other historical audience . But to imply that Shakespeare's own audience came closer than could any other ...
Inhoudsopgave
Preface ང | 1 |
Introduction | 39 |
Discourse on Hamlet | 45 |
Copyright | |
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able accepted action actually analysis appearance aroused artistic asserts audience become believe Book of Judges Caliban character Christian Claudius clinical conflict course created creative crime critics death doubt dream effect ego psychology Elizabethan emotions explain external fact fantasy father feel Fortinbras Freud function genius Ghost Goethe hamartia Hamlet Hecuba historical Horatio human incest interpretation killing King Laertes later literary Madariaga madness man's marriage meaning mind Miss Prosser Montaigne mother murder myth never object observed oedipal Oedipus complex Ophelia perhaps person playwright Polonius possible present problem Prof Prospero psychic psychoanalytic psychological question reality reason reference regard relationship repressed revenge Romeo Romeo and Juliet scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays soliloquy speak speare's spectator stage structure superego symbolic Tempest theory tion tragedy true truth unconscious understanding Ur-Hamlet wish words