シェイクスピアの戯曲におけるモグラのイメージ : トプセルの『動物誌』(1607)に関連して
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
There are several images of mole in the dramatic works of Shakespeare. In Hamlet, for example, the "old mole" signifies the ghost of the former king. In Pericles, the act of a mole which casts away earth towards heaven (such earth is called mole-hill) symbolises a rebellion against the tyrant. And in The Tempest, the acute hearing of a mole has humour to make us smile. In this essay have I taken up mole and mole-hill imagery in Shakespeare, and examined the playwright's treatment of them, with special reference to Edward Topsell's The Historie of Foure-footed Beastes (1607), an encyclopaedic handbook of animals published in London. Shakespeare seldom uses images merely as decoration, but obviously uses them to comment on theme and character. The images of mole, however, do not have any important dramatic function, because they are often isolated and individual. They rather reveal Shakespeare himself as a dramatist.
- 英米文化学会の論文
- 1997-03-31
英米文化学会 | 論文
- D.H.ロレンスにとっての「お金」 : Pansiesからうかがえる経済状態
- D.H.ロレンスとセッカー : 出版人と作家の邂逅
- D.H.ロレンスの書簡研究:新世界からの手紙
- Participation in Communities of a Different Culture : Bilingual Children from Japan in American Communities
- Tension and English Teaching : How Tension Appears in Bilingual Children from Japan in American Communities