Gloriana's Face: Women, Public and Private, in the English RenaissanceS. P. Cerasano, Marion Wynne-Davies Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1992 - Всего страниц: 234 |
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 3 из 41
Стр. 94
... later the couple had disagreements and Wroth implied that Honora had had illicit affairs of which her husband was jealous : Her Cabinets hee [ her husband ] broke open , threatned her servants to make them confesse ; letters he found ...
... later the couple had disagreements and Wroth implied that Honora had had illicit affairs of which her husband was jealous : Her Cabinets hee [ her husband ] broke open , threatned her servants to make them confesse ; letters he found ...
Стр. 120
... Later , near the end of Book II , her even more vehement display of ' the store - house of her deadly desires ' to Pyrocles is cut off by the ' confused rumour ' and ' violent flood ' of a lower - class rebellion , which Pyrocles ...
... Later , near the end of Book II , her even more vehement display of ' the store - house of her deadly desires ' to Pyrocles is cut off by the ' confused rumour ' and ' violent flood ' of a lower - class rebellion , which Pyrocles ...
Стр. 223
... later repression . Phyllis Mack suggests that women's right to exercise ' public authority ' by preaching , prophesying and pub- lishing was based not on any recognition that they possessed previously unnoticed qualities of leadership ...
... later repression . Phyllis Mack suggests that women's right to exercise ' public authority ' by preaching , prophesying and pub- lishing was based not on any recognition that they possessed previously unnoticed qualities of leadership ...
Содержание
Penelope and the Politics of Womans Place in | 25 |
Autobiographical Texts | 47 |
Queen Elizabeth in Her Speeches | 63 |
Авторские права | |
Не показаны другие разделы: 6
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Gloriana's Face: Women, Public and Private, in the English Renaissance S. P. Cerasano,Marion Wynne-Davies Ограниченный просмотр - 1992 |
Gloriana's Face: Women, Public and Private, in the English Renaissance S. P. Cerasano,Marion Wynne-Davies Просмотр фрагмента - 1992 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
Ann Fanshawe Anna Trapnel Anne Clifford Arcadia authority autobiography Barmenissa Ben Jonson Benedick chastity Claudio Coppélia Countess Countess of Bedford criticism daughter desire discourse Eliza Elizabeth of Bohemia England English Renaissance essay example female feminine fiction gender Greene's Gynecia hath Henry Henry IV Hero honest slander Hotspur husband Ibid identity Jacobean John Jonson Kate Katherine King Lady Anne Clifford Lady Mary Wroth Lady Percy language Lear literary London Lord male Margaret marriage Mary Masque of Blackness Masque of Queens metaphor Methuen Mortimer mother Oxford pamphlet patriarchal Penelope Penelope's Petruchio Philoclea play poem political portrait preaching Prince Puritan Puritan women Pyrocles Queen Elizabeth relationship rhetoric role scene seventeenth century sexual Shakespeare Shrew Sidney Sidney's silence social Speght's spiritual story suggests Taming Tilbury tion Trapnel University Press Urania verbal virtue wife woman women writers words writing Wroth York