『ヴェニスの商人』論 : シャイロックを中心に
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概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
If it is allowed to define 'style' as a specific way of using language, which is characteristic of a historical period, The Merchant of Venice is no doubt a very stylistic work. You can find quite a few phrases or passages which reveal Elizabethan anecdotes, ways of living and thinking. There are, however, a few lines where Shylock speaks something beyond or against the 'style'. In those lines, his speeches are so well made that his opponents, especially Antonio, the merchant of Venice, can no longer make any efficient refutations. This essay is intended to shed some lights on why Shakespeare introduced those lines which are against the 'style' and to make clear the role of Antonio in this play.
- 桜花学園大学の論文
- 2003-03-31