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999 _c112976
_d112976
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003 BJBSDDR
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008 120409s1999 vau b 000 0 eng
010 _a 2011377509
020 _a1565856392
020 _a9781565856394
040 _aDLC
_cDLC
042 _apcc
050 0 0 _aLB 14.6
_bS119w 1999
082 _2370
100 1 _aSaccio, Peter
_96318
130 _96091
_aThe Great Courses
245 1 0 _aWilliam Shakespeare :
_bcomedies, histories, and tragedies /
_cPeter Saccio.
246 3 0 _aComedies, histories, and tragedies
260 _aChantilly, Va. :
_bTeaching Co.,
_c1999.
300 _a3 volumes ;
_c21 cm.
440 _96419
_aGreat courses
490 0 _aThe great courses
500 _aCourse no. 280.
500 _a"Lecture transcript and course guidebook"--Cover.
505 _aPart 1: Lecture 1. Shakespeare then and now ; Lecture 2. The nature of Shakespeare's plays ; Lecture 3. Twelfth Night: Shakespearean comedy ; Lecture 4. Twelfth Night: Malvolio in love ; Lecture 5. The Taming of the Shrew: getting married in the 1590s ; Lecture 6. The Taming of the Shrew: farce and romance -- Lecture 7. The Merchant of Venice: courting the heiress ; Lecture 8. The Merchant of Venice: Shylock ; Lecture 9. Measure for Measure: sex in society ; Lecture 10. Measure for Measure: justice and comedy ; Lecture 11. Richard III: Shakespearean history ; Lecture 12. Richard III: the villain's career. Part 2: Lecture 13. Richard II: the theory of kingship ; Lecture 14. Richard II: the fall of the king ; Lecture 15. Henry IV: all the king's men ; Lecture 16. Henry IV: the life of Falstaff ; Lecture 17. Henry V: the death of Falstaff ; Lecture 18. Henry V: the king victorious -- Lecture 19. Romeo and Juliet: Shakespearean tragedy ; Lecture 20. Romeo and Juliet: public violence and private bliss ; Lecture 21. Troilus and Cressida: ancient epic in a new mode ; Lecture 22. Troilus and Cressida: heroic aspirations ; Lecture 23. Julius Caesar: the matter of Rome ; Lecture 24. Julius Caesar: heroes of history. Part 3: Lecture 25. Hamlet: the abundance of the play ; Lecture 26. Hamlet: the causes of tragedy ; Lecture 27. Hamlet: the Protestant hero ; Lecture 28. Othello: the design of the tragedy ; Lecture 29. Othello: "O villainy!" ; Lecture 30. Othello: the noble Moor -- Lecture 31. King Lear : "This is the worst" ; Lecture 32. King Lear: wisdom through suffering ; Lecture 33. King Lear: "Then we go on" ; Lecture 34. Macbeth: "Fair is foul" ; Lecture 35. Macbeth: musing on murder ; Lecture 36. Macbeth: "Enter two murderers."
520 _aThis lecture series introduces the plays of William Shakespeare and explains the achievement that makes him the leading playwright in Western civilization. The key to that achievement is his 'abundance.' Not only in the number and length of his plays, but also in the variety of experiences they depict, the multitude of actions and characters they contain, the combination of public and private life they deal with, the richness of feelings they express and can provoke in an audience and in readers, and the fullness of language and suggestion. Also considered are the kind of theater for which he wrote, the characteristic structures of his plays, and the way the plays easily mingle events from different realms: social levels, levels of realism, and metaphysical contexts.
600 1 0 _a Shakespeare, William,
_d1564-1616
_9123
600 1 4 _9994
_aShakespeare, William,
_d1564-1616
_xCrítica e interpretación.
650 4 _aEducación
_91877
650 4 _aEnseñanza
_96089
710 2 _96101
_aTeaching Company
830 _96091
_aThe Great Courses
906 _a7
_bcbc
_corignew
_d2
_encip
_f20
_gy-gencatlg
942 _2lcc
_cBK