William Shakespeare's Richard III has been the victim of a gross crime: For four hundred years, he has been condemned as a dastardly villain. Scholars and performers alike have declared that Richard is obviously evil, but little do they realize that they have been deceived. Richard's villainy is not as apparent as it would seem, but instead is a construction that comes from within the play itself. Ultimately, this construction is Shakespeare's, and, like a magnifying glass, it is meant to direct our attention to the fallacy of conflating deformity and villainy. We are not meant to believe the relationship presented in the text; instead, we are meant to question it. By critically examining how Richard's identity shifts from a valorous war he...
In Act I scene iv, Hamlet disparagingly describes Claudius’ intemperance as one of those qualities w...
Plots. Hidden motives. Subtlety, falseness, treachery: Richard III, Wolsey—each of these leaders ...
Machiavelli complains that Christianity makes men feeble, incapable of following the Romans in searc...
This paper is one attempt to analyse the structure of Shakespeare\u27s History Richard III and to co...
Shakespeare’s Henry V and Richard III both practise mendacity, but while Henry V celebrates Henry’s ...
This thesis focuses on William Shakespeare’s play, Richard III and Niccolo Machiavelli’s political t...
This is an examination of the evil characters in Shakespearian works like Richard III, King Lear, Ot...
The article is an analysis of the manipulative rhetoric of Richard of Gloucester - the main characte...
Open Access journalThe discovery of the body of the historical Richard III under a Leicester car par...
Richard III is one of the most infamous villains in historical drama. His actions and mannerisms are...
The process of vilification of Richard III started at the end of the fifteenth century, when a well...
Thomas More’s narrative The History of King Richard the Third (ca. 1514) and William Shakespeare’s p...
The process of vilification of Richard III started at the end of the fifteenth century, when a well-...
In tracing the development of Shakespeare\u27s history plays, the recurring problem of legitimacy is...
This article examines Shakespeare’s Richard III as an important example of staging disability in ear...
In Act I scene iv, Hamlet disparagingly describes Claudius’ intemperance as one of those qualities w...
Plots. Hidden motives. Subtlety, falseness, treachery: Richard III, Wolsey—each of these leaders ...
Machiavelli complains that Christianity makes men feeble, incapable of following the Romans in searc...
This paper is one attempt to analyse the structure of Shakespeare\u27s History Richard III and to co...
Shakespeare’s Henry V and Richard III both practise mendacity, but while Henry V celebrates Henry’s ...
This thesis focuses on William Shakespeare’s play, Richard III and Niccolo Machiavelli’s political t...
This is an examination of the evil characters in Shakespearian works like Richard III, King Lear, Ot...
The article is an analysis of the manipulative rhetoric of Richard of Gloucester - the main characte...
Open Access journalThe discovery of the body of the historical Richard III under a Leicester car par...
Richard III is one of the most infamous villains in historical drama. His actions and mannerisms are...
The process of vilification of Richard III started at the end of the fifteenth century, when a well...
Thomas More’s narrative The History of King Richard the Third (ca. 1514) and William Shakespeare’s p...
The process of vilification of Richard III started at the end of the fifteenth century, when a well-...
In tracing the development of Shakespeare\u27s history plays, the recurring problem of legitimacy is...
This article examines Shakespeare’s Richard III as an important example of staging disability in ear...
In Act I scene iv, Hamlet disparagingly describes Claudius’ intemperance as one of those qualities w...
Plots. Hidden motives. Subtlety, falseness, treachery: Richard III, Wolsey—each of these leaders ...
Machiavelli complains that Christianity makes men feeble, incapable of following the Romans in searc...