This thesis is a critical study of the theme of shame in Shakespeare. The first chapter defines the senses in which shame is used. Chapter Two analyses the workings of shame in pre-renaissance literature. The argument sets aside the increasingly discredited shame-culture versus guilt-culture antithesis still often applied to classical and Christian Europe; then classical and Christian shame are compared. Chapter Three focuses on shame in the English Renaissance, with illustrations from Spenser, Marlowe, Jonson, and Milton. Attention is also paid to the cultural context, for instance, to the shaming sanctions employed by the church courts. It is argued that, paradoxically, the humanist aspirations of this period made men and women more vulne...
Aristotle presents shame as a non-virtue, but through a careful analysis of his definition and discu...
This thesis investigates Shakespeare’s treatment of melancholy, jealousy and repentance in Hamlet,...
My dissertation argues that Shakespeare transforms Aristotelian epideixis (the rhetorical mode compr...
This thesis examines the cultures of shame in the latter half of the seventeenth- and eighteenth-cen...
Humiliation has a powerful presence in Shakespeare's tragedies and late plays. With an unusual abili...
Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College. This project i...
'Banished' - the word resounds in many Elizabethan and Jacobean plays, particularly in those of Shak...
The dissertation develops an interdisciplinary account of the psychological and affective state of s...
This thesis examines how Shakespeare incorporated early modern social policing and public shaming pr...
This thesis investigates the idea that using the religious, moral and literary construct of the Seve...
This thesis examines how Shakespeare incorporated early modern social policing and public shaming pr...
In this paper, I explore the experience of shame and its connections to recognition and love as mani...
Christian values permeated all aspects of human activity in sixteenth century England; the basic tru...
In this paper, I explore the experience of shame and its connections to recognition and love as mani...
Shakespeare returned to the theme of rape on a number of occasions throughout his career, but only "...
Aristotle presents shame as a non-virtue, but through a careful analysis of his definition and discu...
This thesis investigates Shakespeare’s treatment of melancholy, jealousy and repentance in Hamlet,...
My dissertation argues that Shakespeare transforms Aristotelian epideixis (the rhetorical mode compr...
This thesis examines the cultures of shame in the latter half of the seventeenth- and eighteenth-cen...
Humiliation has a powerful presence in Shakespeare's tragedies and late plays. With an unusual abili...
Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College. This project i...
'Banished' - the word resounds in many Elizabethan and Jacobean plays, particularly in those of Shak...
The dissertation develops an interdisciplinary account of the psychological and affective state of s...
This thesis examines how Shakespeare incorporated early modern social policing and public shaming pr...
This thesis investigates the idea that using the religious, moral and literary construct of the Seve...
This thesis examines how Shakespeare incorporated early modern social policing and public shaming pr...
In this paper, I explore the experience of shame and its connections to recognition and love as mani...
Christian values permeated all aspects of human activity in sixteenth century England; the basic tru...
In this paper, I explore the experience of shame and its connections to recognition and love as mani...
Shakespeare returned to the theme of rape on a number of occasions throughout his career, but only "...
Aristotle presents shame as a non-virtue, but through a careful analysis of his definition and discu...
This thesis investigates Shakespeare’s treatment of melancholy, jealousy and repentance in Hamlet,...
My dissertation argues that Shakespeare transforms Aristotelian epideixis (the rhetorical mode compr...