
Tragic Form in Shakespeare
Description
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From detailed analyses of each of Shakespeare's ten tragedies emerges a characteristic structure-a five-phased movement of discovery-that articulates and orders the traditional components of tragedy. This sequence is one of predicament, psychomachia, peripeteia, perspectives of irony and pathos, and catastrophe. It is a continuous, accumulative, and consummatory one, rather than a simple up-down movement or even a more complex thesis-antithesis-synthesis. Inheriting a five-act model and its developed rationale, Shakespeare used it to express an ever richer and more complex tragic experience. As the protagonist's life unfolds before us, the development of his tragic recognition is coextensive with the whole of the action.
Originally published in 1972.
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Content
Contents, pg. vii
Preface, pg. ix
Chapter I. The Tragic Progress, pg. 1
Chapter II. Romeo and Juliet, pg. 31
Chapter III. Richard II, pg. 59
Chapter IV. Julius Caesar, pg. 96
Chapter V. Hamlet, pg. 128
Chapter VI. Othello, pg. 178
Chapter VII. Macbeth, pg. 214
Chapter VIII. Kinglear, pg. 258
Chapter IX. Antony and Cleopatra, pg. 306
Chapter X. Coriolanus, pg. 356
Index, pg. 405
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