This chapter examines the speech acts that denote and surround death in Shakespeare’s tragedies, and considers the part they play in enacting and indicating death timings on the English Renaissance stage. A character’s death can be heralded by his or her dying words, gestures, or sounds; by the observations of another character; or (in the text) by a stage direction. But those pronounced dead—like Othello’s wife Desdemona—may come back to life, if only temporarily, and variant textual states in plays such as Hamlet and King Lear create different moments and kinds of dying. This chapter argues that textual cues do not always indicate a clear point at which someone can be pronounced (theatrically) dead, and moreover that Shakespeare exploits ...
En este ensayo he tratado de explicar el tratamiento del tema de la muerte en lo que hoy popularment...
Previous contributors to this collection have explored the death and dying themes in a variety of wa...
This essay underlines the original Shakespearean exploration of the unstable boundary of the life/de...
A master of storytelling, William Shakespeare knew exactly how to tug at the heartstrings of his aud...
In Renaissance England, dying a good death helped to ensure that the soul was prepared for the after...
Hamlet registers both the survival of the medieval ars moriendi and their changed status in post-Ref...
A master of storytelling, William Shakespeare knew exactly how to tug at the heartstrings of his aud...
This research focuses on the hero's death in two Shakespearean plays, Othello and Romeo and Juliet. ...
Most studies of the lamenting women in English medieval and Shakespearean drama view them as the pro...
This dissertation explores how late medieval and early modern English culture understood the possibi...
In the case of some Shakespearian characters (e.g.Richard II and Julius Caesar) their postmortal pre...
Equivocation is a condition of language that runs riot in Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, and King Lear. W...
Examines the function of the trope of the couterfeit death for two Shakespearean heroines, Juliet in...
The ‘O, o, o, o’ that follows Hamlet’s ‘The rest is silence’ in Shakespeare’s first folio has often ...
Shakespearean mourners display aggression in lieu of grief, they rely upon introjection and substitu...
En este ensayo he tratado de explicar el tratamiento del tema de la muerte en lo que hoy popularment...
Previous contributors to this collection have explored the death and dying themes in a variety of wa...
This essay underlines the original Shakespearean exploration of the unstable boundary of the life/de...
A master of storytelling, William Shakespeare knew exactly how to tug at the heartstrings of his aud...
In Renaissance England, dying a good death helped to ensure that the soul was prepared for the after...
Hamlet registers both the survival of the medieval ars moriendi and their changed status in post-Ref...
A master of storytelling, William Shakespeare knew exactly how to tug at the heartstrings of his aud...
This research focuses on the hero's death in two Shakespearean plays, Othello and Romeo and Juliet. ...
Most studies of the lamenting women in English medieval and Shakespearean drama view them as the pro...
This dissertation explores how late medieval and early modern English culture understood the possibi...
In the case of some Shakespearian characters (e.g.Richard II and Julius Caesar) their postmortal pre...
Equivocation is a condition of language that runs riot in Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, and King Lear. W...
Examines the function of the trope of the couterfeit death for two Shakespearean heroines, Juliet in...
The ‘O, o, o, o’ that follows Hamlet’s ‘The rest is silence’ in Shakespeare’s first folio has often ...
Shakespearean mourners display aggression in lieu of grief, they rely upon introjection and substitu...
En este ensayo he tratado de explicar el tratamiento del tema de la muerte en lo que hoy popularment...
Previous contributors to this collection have explored the death and dying themes in a variety of wa...
This essay underlines the original Shakespearean exploration of the unstable boundary of the life/de...