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Julius Ceasar. / William Shakespeare ; edited by T. S. Dorsh.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Croatia : Methuem & Co. Ltd., c1997.Description: xxiv 166 p. 20 cmISBN:
  • 0-17-443590-8
Summary: Julius Ceasar is an ambivalent study of civil conflict.As in Richard 11,the play is structured around two protagonists rather than one.Ceasar and Brutus ,men of extraordinary abilities and debilitating weaknesses are, more like one another than either would care to admit.This antithetical balance reflects a dual tradtition :the medieval view of Dante and of Geoffrey Chaucer,condemning Brutus and Caius as conspirators,and the Renaissance view of Sir Philip Sidney and Brent Jonson,condemning Ceasar as tyrant."In" The Complete Works of Shakespeare,edited by David Bevington.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Reference Reference Aklatang Emilio Aguinaldo-Information Resource Center Reference PR 2808 .D728 1997 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan 3AEAD00026341N
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PR 2806 .N842 1997 Cymbeline. / PR 2807 .J416 1997 Hamlet. / PR 2808 .D222 1998 Julius Caesar. / PR 2808 .D728 1997 Julius Ceasar. / PR 2810.H88 1997 The first part of King Henry IV / PR 2812 .C846 1997 King Henry V. / PR 2814.C213 1997 King Henry VI. /

Julius Ceasar is an ambivalent study of civil conflict.As in Richard 11,the play is structured around two protagonists rather than one.Ceasar and Brutus ,men of extraordinary abilities and debilitating weaknesses are, more like one another than either would care to admit.This antithetical balance reflects a dual tradtition :the medieval view of Dante and of Geoffrey Chaucer,condemning Brutus and Caius as conspirators,and the Renaissance view of Sir Philip Sidney and Brent Jonson,condemning Ceasar as tyrant."In" The Complete Works of Shakespeare,edited by David Bevington.

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