Having been discussed for more than four centuries, Shakespeare (1564-1616), believed by many critics to be the most important English dramatist, is still inexhaustible. Through these years and especially in the twentieth century, many different approaches have been applied to his plays. This study is an attempt to have a postmodernist reading of The Tempest (1610). Based on the definition and characterization of postmodernism by Ihab Hassan and Brian McHale, and through a careful language analysis, the postmodernist elements in the speeches of characters are detected and discussed. By using postmodernist elements and techniques such as puns, wordplays, paradoxes, and versal prose, the language becomes anarchic, playful, disperse, polymorph...
Abstract. On the horizon of literary criticism today, text just does not have a general meaning, but...
In critical history, Shakespeare's The Tempest has been interpreted as a reticent play, a fascinatin...
Adaptations and vernacular appropriations on page and stage offer alternative readings of Shakespear...
Having been discussed for more than four centuries, Shakespeare (1564-1616), believed by many critic...
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Art...
The works of William Shakespeare have a universal influence and are considered representatives of al...
The twentieth century brought about a new form of understanding, producing and living art that has b...
The paper purports to examine dominant semiotic and ideological propositions underlying recent re-re...
This thesis aims to present a reading of three plays by William Shakespeare from the perspective of ...
This article explores the different senses in which the word “modernity” has been employed in critic...
The “seeming” “color” of the dominant narrative in Shakespeare’s play, King Henry IV is to strengthe...
Addressing for the first time Shakespeare’s place in counter-cultural cinema, this book examines and...
This dissertation contends that The Tempest by William Shakespeare plays a seminal role in the devel...
Postmodernism is among the most discussed subjects in contemporary world. Despite the criticism, pos...
This study contextualises Fredric Jameson's theories on the postmodern to analyse both contemporary ...
Abstract. On the horizon of literary criticism today, text just does not have a general meaning, but...
In critical history, Shakespeare's The Tempest has been interpreted as a reticent play, a fascinatin...
Adaptations and vernacular appropriations on page and stage offer alternative readings of Shakespear...
Having been discussed for more than four centuries, Shakespeare (1564-1616), believed by many critic...
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Art...
The works of William Shakespeare have a universal influence and are considered representatives of al...
The twentieth century brought about a new form of understanding, producing and living art that has b...
The paper purports to examine dominant semiotic and ideological propositions underlying recent re-re...
This thesis aims to present a reading of three plays by William Shakespeare from the perspective of ...
This article explores the different senses in which the word “modernity” has been employed in critic...
The “seeming” “color” of the dominant narrative in Shakespeare’s play, King Henry IV is to strengthe...
Addressing for the first time Shakespeare’s place in counter-cultural cinema, this book examines and...
This dissertation contends that The Tempest by William Shakespeare plays a seminal role in the devel...
Postmodernism is among the most discussed subjects in contemporary world. Despite the criticism, pos...
This study contextualises Fredric Jameson's theories on the postmodern to analyse both contemporary ...
Abstract. On the horizon of literary criticism today, text just does not have a general meaning, but...
In critical history, Shakespeare's The Tempest has been interpreted as a reticent play, a fascinatin...
Adaptations and vernacular appropriations on page and stage offer alternative readings of Shakespear...