The Complete Macbeth

The Complete Macbeth

The Complete Macbeth

Donald J. Richardson / Donald JRichardson

32,25 €
IVA incluido
Consulta disponibilidad
Editorial:
AuthorHouse
Año de edición:
2013
Materia
Educación pedagogía
ISBN:
9781477299913

Selecciona una librería:

  • Librería Samer Atenea
  • Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
  • Kálamo Books
  • Librería Perelló (Valencia)
  • Librería Elías (Asturias)
  • Donde los libros
  • Librería Kolima (Madrid)
  • Librería Proteo (Málaga)

Of the five major Shakespearean tragedies-Hamlet, Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet,King Lear, and Othello-Macbeth is in some ways the most accessible. For oneit is the shortest. For another the witches continue to attract audiences just asthey did during Elizabethan times. In addition he cinematographic approach of the lastact-cutting easily from scene to scene-works as well as it did in Shakespeare’s time.Thus, the play is a natural to introduce students to the Shakespeare canon. Probably itdoesn’t rival Romeo and Juliet in popularity with students or Julius Caesar with teachers,but nevertheless it is a finished, representative work of the best of William Shakespeare.In addition the main theme-ambition-one which is relevant to Americans today,can be witnessed again and again, especially during our quadrennial presidential elections.'I have no spur to prick the sides of my intent,' Macbeth muses; there are those seekingto attract the public eye for whom this statement applies equally well.I cannot say I enjoyed reading Macbeth the first time. It was an assignment and, asdo many students, I disliked having to read the play. However, over the years of teachingthe play and re-reading it-by choice-I have come to regard the play with respect andsimultaneously admiration for the playwright. The play communicates its own specialnumen. Macbeth is the most tightly unified of the Shakespearean tragedies, and it is filledwith major themes-ambition, definition of character, allegiance to one’s state and king-and some which may be regarded as minor-sleep, drink, and humor. None of themcould be sacrificed as together they make a unity of approach meant to satisfy the generalaudience and the groundlings. As one who has a foot in both camps, I believe the play isa masterpiece.

Artículos relacionados

  • Beekeeping At The End Of The Earth
    Mark David Leech
    Beekeeping at the End of the Earth, an essential read for learning about beekeeping in a cool temperate climate with a focus on Tasmania our island home.  One hundred beekeepers one hundred different ways to keep bees.Beekeeping At The End Of The Earth is a practical insight into cool climate beekeeping with a focus on Tasmania, our island home.Richly illustrated with unique di...
    Disponible

    45,16 €

  • Be the One for Kids
    Ryan Sheehy
    One person can make a difference.That person can be you. “I want to show others that one person can make the difference in a child’s life. I want all educators, parents, coaches, and everyone in between to know they have power to Be the One for Kids.” —Ryan Sheehy If you ever feel like you’re all alone or think that no one gets you, just imagine how your students feel. Kids wan...
    Disponible

    27,99 €

  • Handbook of Research on E-Learning Standards and Interoperability
    As the e-learning industry continues to expand and the methods and tools necessary to create and maintain content and infrastructure applications become more complicated, there is an inherent need for these applications to interoperate and exchange data in order to better support the needs of learners and educators. Handbook of Research on E-Learning Standards and Interoperabil...
  • Teaching in the Knowledge Society
    Antonio Cartelli
    ...
  • Enhancing Learning Through Human Computer Interaction
    Elspeth McKay
    ...
  • Learning Objects for Instruction
    Pamela Taylor Northrup
    ...

Otros libros del autor

  • Return to the Earth
    Donald J. Richardson / Donald JRichardson
    There are numerous townsites in western Kansas where people tried to build a settlement. They trusted in the land, in themselves, in their children, and in the future. One of the sites was Cordia. ...
    Disponible

    16,22 €

  • Hst
    Donald J. Richardson / Donald JRichardson
    When I was a boy in Missouri, I could have visited President Truman as Independence was only a few dozen miles from Utica. Yet the thought never occurred to me. Thus, the tribute is based on what might have been.I have few positive memories of Initiation, however. ...
    Disponible

    12,91 €

  • The Complete First Part of Henry VI
    Donald J. Richardson / Donald JRichardson
    One recurrent criticism of the First Part of HVI is its cavalier disregard for chronology and historical events. However, Lawrence V. Ryan argues that the “disjointing of time . . . enables him [Shakespeare] to achieve striking dramatic and didactic effects” (xxx). Thus, one is enjoined to remember Coleridge’s admonition to suspend disbelief. Ryan argues that 1HVI is “by no mea...
    Disponible

    16,02 €

  • The Complete First Part of Henry VI
    Donald J. Richardson / Donald JRichardson
    One recurrent criticism of the First Part of HVI is its cavalier disregard for chronology and historical events. However, Lawrence V. Ryan argues that the “disjointing of time . . . enables him [Shakespeare] to achieve striking dramatic and didactic effects” (xxx). Thus, one is enjoined to remember Coleridge’s admonition to suspend disbelief. Ryan argues that 1HVI is “by no mea...
  • The Complete Timon of Athens
    Donald J. Richardson / Donald JRichardson
    Timon of Athens might be regarded as the ancestor of Moliere’s Les Misanthrope—in that Alceste seems to embody all the negativity of Timon. Timon also illustrates the error of equating friendship with finances. “He finds that his idealization of friendship has been an illusion” (Mowat, xiv). “He is, thus, a man ‘nobly but unwisely generous’” (Hinman, 17). “The play, itself, is ...
    Disponible

    24,50 €

  • The Complete Timon of Athens
    Donald J. Richardson / Donald JRichardson
    Timon of Athens might be regarded as the ancestor of Moliere’s Les Misanthrope—in that Alceste seems to embody all the negativity of Timon. Timon also illustrates the error of equating friendship with finances. “He finds that his idealization of friendship has been an illusion” (Mowat, xiv). “He is, thus, a man ‘nobly but unwisely generous’” (Hinman, 17). “The play, itself, is ...