Generosity and the Limits of Authority: Shakespeare, Herbert, MiltonCornell University Press, 1992 - 277 עמודים Generosity is an ambiguous quality, William Flesch observes; while receiving gifts is pleasant, gift-giving both displays the wealth and strength of the giver and places the receiver under an obligation. In provocative new readings of Shakespeare, Herbert, and Milton, Flesch illuminates the personal authority that is bound inextricably with acts of generosity. Drawing on the work of such theorists as Mauss, Blanchot, Bourdieu, Wittgenstein, Bloom, Cavell, and Greenblatt, Flesch maintains that the literary power of Shakespeare, Herbert, and Milton is at its most intense when they are exploring the limits of generosity. He considers how in Herbert's Temple divine assurance of the possibility of redemption is put into question and how the poet approaches such a gift with the ambivalence of a beneficiary. In his readings of Shakespeare's Richard II, Henry IV, King Lear, Antony and Cleopatra, and the sonnets, Flesch examines the perspective of the benefactor--including Shakespeare himself--who confronts the decline of his capacity to give. Turning to Milton's Paradise Lost, Flesch identifies two opposing ways of understanding generosity--Satan's, on the one hand, and Adam and Eve's, on the other - and elaborates the different conceptions of poetry to which these understandings give rise. Scholars of Shakespeare and of Renaissance culture, Miltonists, literary theorists, and others interested in the relationship between philosophy and literature will want to read this insightful and challenging book. |
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תוצאות 1-3 מתוך 28
... finally this experience of loss or depletion on a divine scale that Herbert conveys . Shakespeare's greatest tragic figures — Richard II , Lear , Antony - also find their capacity to be generous coming to an end in impoverishment and ...
... finally moves the language into the realm of finality and of the superlative ; but the strangeness of the lines nevertheless subsists , and the superlative is more a blank description than a judgment as to absolutes : The oldest hath ...
... finally to be directed to the generality of God's generosity and not to any specific or created thing . The prevalence of that generality will finally come to the fore when God is no longer conceived as a person , as a specific being or ...
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Generosity and the Limits of Authority: Shakespeare, Herbert, Milton <span dir=ltr>William Flesch</span> תצוגה מקדימה מוגבלת - 2018 |
Generosity and the Limits of Authority: Shakespeare, Herbert, Milton <span dir=ltr>William Flesch</span> תצוגה מקדימה מוגבלת - 2018 |