The Witness of Times: Manifestations of Ideology in Seventeenth Century EnglandKatherine Z. Keller, Gerald J. Schiffhorst A collection of eleven essays examining, through a variety of venues, the extent to which ideological representations interact with what is arguably the radical dialectic of the period: the increasing significance of power rather than authority as an ideological framework. |
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Page 92
... structure to antistructure to renewed social structure.4 This is achieved as ritual passengers move from rituals of separation from social status into liminality - a ritual time and space in which license is enjoyed — and finally to ...
... structure to antistructure to renewed social structure.4 This is achieved as ritual passengers move from rituals of separation from social status into liminality - a ritual time and space in which license is enjoyed — and finally to ...
Page 100
... structure by using language , his daughter does much the same thing . She begins by telling the Knight she can commit adultery with him anywhere ; she then tells her father that the Knight is her brother - in- law , and she concludes by ...
... structure by using language , his daughter does much the same thing . She begins by telling the Knight she can commit adultery with him anywhere ; she then tells her father that the Knight is her brother - in- law , and she concludes by ...
Page 122
... structures must more or less necessarily be sacrificed . " ( Knights , 7 ) Although Knights's " recent economic historian ... structure in our pleasure . ( 17 ) Yet in spite of the obvious prestige accorded this and related views , a ...
... structures must more or less necessarily be sacrificed . " ( Knights , 7 ) Although Knights's " recent economic historian ... structure in our pleasure . ( 17 ) Yet in spite of the obvious prestige accorded this and related views , a ...
Contents
Imagination and Ideology | 148 |
This Giant Has Wounded | 218 |
Notes | 261 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
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according action appear argues attempt audience authority Barlow become believe Bunyan Cause Cecil Christian Church Civil claim clearly common continued court criticism culture death Duke Earl early Edward effect England English Essex example exchange fact figure final give Gunpowder hand Herbert Honor ideology imagination interests James James's John king Lady later London Lord Macbeth marriage masque means merchants metaphor Middleton Milton monarch nature Notes Notions once Oxford pageants pamphlet perhaps perspective play political position present propaganda Prospero Queen question readers relation religion religious represented rhetorical rituals royal rule sense sermon seventeenth century Shakespeare's social speak speech stage structure suggests theater things Thomas thou traditional Triumphs true truth University writing York