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- 16022777 alternative "Shakespeare's relation to tradition.".
- 16022777 contributor B551551.
- 16022777 created "1916.".
- 16022777 date "1916".
- 16022777 date "1916.".
- 16022777 dateCopyrighted "1916.".
- 16022777 description "The effect of tradition in poetry.--Comedy: Types of comedy before Shakespeare. Evidence of the influence of Munday on Shakespeare leading up to Shakespeare's use of the folk-play. The traces of folk-plays in Shakespeare's drama.--Tragedy and conclusion: The Greek tragic hero. The pre-Shakespearean and Shakespearean tragic hero to the earliest Hamlet. Honour the subject of Elizabethan tragedy. Shakespeare's rejection of the superman. Post-Shakespearean tragedy still occupied with the same conception in a narrower form. The later Hamlet and King Lear. Conclusion: The individual is esentially tragic; consolation is only possible when we regard all life as one.".
- 16022777 extent "x, 102 p.".
- 16022777 issued "1916".
- 16022777 issued "1916.".
- 16022777 language "eng".
- 16022777 publisher "Oxford, B. H. Blackwell,".
- 16022777 subject "PR2952 .S6".
- 16022777 subject "Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616 Philosophy.".
- 16022777 subject "Tragedy.".
- 16022777 tableOfContents "The effect of tradition in poetry.--Comedy: Types of comedy before Shakespeare. Evidence of the influence of Munday on Shakespeare leading up to Shakespeare's use of the folk-play. The traces of folk-plays in Shakespeare's drama.--Tragedy and conclusion: The Greek tragic hero. The pre-Shakespearean and Shakespearean tragic hero to the earliest Hamlet. Honour the subject of Elizabethan tragedy. Shakespeare's rejection of the superman. Post-Shakespearean tragedy still occupied with the same conception in a narrower form. The later Hamlet and King Lear. Conclusion: The individual is esentially tragic; consolation is only possible when we regard all life as one.".
- 16022777 title "An essay on Shakespeare's relation to tradition, by Janet Spens.".
- 16022777 type "text".