The ‘O, o, o, o’ that follows Hamlet’s ‘The rest is silence’ in Shakespeare’s first folio has often been derided, but this signal is found in five other Shakespeare plays and in the works of dramatists as varied as Jonson, Middleton, Fletcher, Massinger, and Brome to indicate that a figure is dying, mortally wounded, or sick, or to generate a comic effect. Shakespeare was adept at using the tools at hand, but to understand his distinctive implementation of those tools requires a working knowledge of the theatrical vocabulary shared at that time by playwrights, players, and playgoers
Shakespearean mourners display aggression in lieu of grief, they rely upon introjection and substitu...
Not all the ‘forms, moods, shapes of grief’ can denote Hamlet truly (or so he insists) ‘for these ar...
This essay examines ambiguities in Hamlet and argues that wordplay represents the nature of Hamlet's...
The ‘O, o, o, o’ that follows Hamlet’s ‘The rest is silence’ in Shakespeare's first folio has often ...
This chapter examines the speech acts that denote and surround death in Shakespeare’s tragedies, and...
This study suggests a different method of examining Shakespeare\u27s use of silent characters. The s...
Suicide is a frequent and important occurrence in the oeuvre of Shakespeare. While Shakespeare\u27s ...
Hamlet registers both the survival of the medieval ars moriendi and their changed status in post-Ref...
This article demonstrates how Shakespeare used Hamlet to explore Renaissance ideas regarding politic...
This research focuses on the hero's death in two Shakespearean plays, Othello and Romeo and Juliet. ...
Equivocation is a condition of language that runs riot in Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, and King Lear. W...
Hamlet, which is one of the masterpieces of William Shakespeare, narrates the tragedy of the Prince ...
William Shakespeare\u27s Hamlet, Prince of Denmark has been the source of question, debate, and rese...
A master of storytelling, William Shakespeare knew exactly how to tug at the heartstrings of his aud...
In my comps I explore the inverse of tragicomedy - comitragedy, a type of play with both tragic and ...
Shakespearean mourners display aggression in lieu of grief, they rely upon introjection and substitu...
Not all the ‘forms, moods, shapes of grief’ can denote Hamlet truly (or so he insists) ‘for these ar...
This essay examines ambiguities in Hamlet and argues that wordplay represents the nature of Hamlet's...
The ‘O, o, o, o’ that follows Hamlet’s ‘The rest is silence’ in Shakespeare's first folio has often ...
This chapter examines the speech acts that denote and surround death in Shakespeare’s tragedies, and...
This study suggests a different method of examining Shakespeare\u27s use of silent characters. The s...
Suicide is a frequent and important occurrence in the oeuvre of Shakespeare. While Shakespeare\u27s ...
Hamlet registers both the survival of the medieval ars moriendi and their changed status in post-Ref...
This article demonstrates how Shakespeare used Hamlet to explore Renaissance ideas regarding politic...
This research focuses on the hero's death in two Shakespearean plays, Othello and Romeo and Juliet. ...
Equivocation is a condition of language that runs riot in Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, and King Lear. W...
Hamlet, which is one of the masterpieces of William Shakespeare, narrates the tragedy of the Prince ...
William Shakespeare\u27s Hamlet, Prince of Denmark has been the source of question, debate, and rese...
A master of storytelling, William Shakespeare knew exactly how to tug at the heartstrings of his aud...
In my comps I explore the inverse of tragicomedy - comitragedy, a type of play with both tragic and ...
Shakespearean mourners display aggression in lieu of grief, they rely upon introjection and substitu...
Not all the ‘forms, moods, shapes of grief’ can denote Hamlet truly (or so he insists) ‘for these ar...
This essay examines ambiguities in Hamlet and argues that wordplay represents the nature of Hamlet's...