Thesis advisor: Mary CraneThis project examines Shakespeare’s engagement with and refashioning of one of the primary aesthetic debates of his time known as the paragone, most often invoked in the English context by the Horatian maxim ut pictura poesis (“as painting, so poetry”). Sometimes a neutral comparison of the arts, at other times a rivalry, Shakespeare’s own paragones measure the representational capacities and constraints of narrative and lyric poetry against embodied drama, and simultaneously with regard to painting and sculpture. The primary way in which Shakespeare conducts these explorations, I argue, is by turning to rhetorical figures and tropes that can be translated across mediums, experimenting with how they function differ...
Scholars are far from agreed as to the basic nature of Shakespeare's last plays or Romances. Concent...
William Shakespeare's tragic plays often detail the familial and romantic relationships between men...
The dissertation explores Shakespearean representations of subjectivity. I investigate how Shakespea...
This thesis straddles the intersection of two contemporary topics in Shakespeare scholarship: the ne...
The plays of Shakespeare included in this thesis are:- As You Like It, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Tw...
This dissertation explores echoes of Chaucer\u27s dream visions in two of Shakespeare\u27s late play...
This dissertation explores echoes of Chaucer\u27s dream visions in two of Shakespeare\u27s late play...
My dissertation argues that Shakespeare transforms Aristotelian epideixis (the rhetorical mode compr...
This dissertation makes a comparative study of Homeric Greek, Classical Greek, Modernist, and late m...
Part of what has led to fetishizing Shakespeare both inside and outside of the academy is the inexpl...
William Shakespeare (1564-1616) remains simultaneously the most produced and most studied playwright...
William Shakespeare (1564-1616) remains simultaneously the most produced and most studied playwright...
Paradox in Shakespeare’s four tragicomedies - Pericles, Cymbeline, The Winter’s Tale, and The Tempes...
Shakespeare and the Idea of the Book is about the book in Shakespeare's plays; the book as an object...
Paradox in Shakespeare’s four tragicomedies - Pericles, Cymbeline, The Winter’s Tale, and The Tempes...
Scholars are far from agreed as to the basic nature of Shakespeare's last plays or Romances. Concent...
William Shakespeare's tragic plays often detail the familial and romantic relationships between men...
The dissertation explores Shakespearean representations of subjectivity. I investigate how Shakespea...
This thesis straddles the intersection of two contemporary topics in Shakespeare scholarship: the ne...
The plays of Shakespeare included in this thesis are:- As You Like It, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Tw...
This dissertation explores echoes of Chaucer\u27s dream visions in two of Shakespeare\u27s late play...
This dissertation explores echoes of Chaucer\u27s dream visions in two of Shakespeare\u27s late play...
My dissertation argues that Shakespeare transforms Aristotelian epideixis (the rhetorical mode compr...
This dissertation makes a comparative study of Homeric Greek, Classical Greek, Modernist, and late m...
Part of what has led to fetishizing Shakespeare both inside and outside of the academy is the inexpl...
William Shakespeare (1564-1616) remains simultaneously the most produced and most studied playwright...
William Shakespeare (1564-1616) remains simultaneously the most produced and most studied playwright...
Paradox in Shakespeare’s four tragicomedies - Pericles, Cymbeline, The Winter’s Tale, and The Tempes...
Shakespeare and the Idea of the Book is about the book in Shakespeare's plays; the book as an object...
Paradox in Shakespeare’s four tragicomedies - Pericles, Cymbeline, The Winter’s Tale, and The Tempes...
Scholars are far from agreed as to the basic nature of Shakespeare's last plays or Romances. Concent...
William Shakespeare's tragic plays often detail the familial and romantic relationships between men...
The dissertation explores Shakespearean representations of subjectivity. I investigate how Shakespea...