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Articles 1 - 14 of 14

Full-Text Articles in Cultural History

Our Paper 12/1988, Our Paper Dec 1988

Our Paper 12/1988, Our Paper

Our Paper (1983-1992)

No abstract provided.


Our Paper 11/1988, Our Paper Nov 1988

Our Paper 11/1988, Our Paper

Our Paper (1983-1992)

No abstract provided.


Our Paper 10/1988, Our Paper Oct 1988

Our Paper 10/1988, Our Paper

Our Paper (1983-1992)

No abstract provided.


Our Paper 09/1988, Our Paper Sep 1988

Our Paper 09/1988, Our Paper

Our Paper (1983-1992)

No abstract provided.


Our Paper 08/1988, Our Paper Aug 1988

Our Paper 08/1988, Our Paper

Our Paper (1983-1992)

No abstract provided.


Our Paper 07/1988, Our Paper Jul 1988

Our Paper 07/1988, Our Paper

Our Paper (1983-1992)

No abstract provided.


Our Paper 06/1988, Our Paper Jun 1988

Our Paper 06/1988, Our Paper

Our Paper (1983-1992)

No abstract provided.


Our Paper 05/1988, Our Paper May 1988

Our Paper 05/1988, Our Paper

Our Paper (1983-1992)

No abstract provided.


Our Paper 04/1988, Our Paper Apr 1988

Our Paper 04/1988, Our Paper

Our Paper (1983-1992)

No abstract provided.


Our Paper 03/1988, Our Paper Mar 1988

Our Paper 03/1988, Our Paper

Our Paper (1983-1992)

No abstract provided.


Our Paper 02/1988, Our Paper Feb 1988

Our Paper 02/1988, Our Paper

Our Paper (1983-1992)

No abstract provided.


Self-Effacement And Autonomy In Shakespeare, Kirby Farrell Prof Dec 1987

Self-Effacement And Autonomy In Shakespeare, Kirby Farrell Prof

kirby farrell

This chapter develops the argument in "Self-Effacement and Autonomy in Sx," extending it to fantasies of apotheosis in the poems and plays.


Self-Effacement And Autonomy In Shakespeare, Kirby Farrell Prof Dec 1987

Self-Effacement And Autonomy In Shakespeare, Kirby Farrell Prof

kirby farrell

This is a chapter from my _Play, Death, and Heroism in Shakespeare_ (1988). It identifies a pattern of behavior in Sx and Early Modern culture, in which children learn to efface themselves in order to achieve (or "earn") autonomy. The paradigm has significant implications for the structure of authority in EarlyModern culture, and in Shakespeare supports the fantasies of heroic apotheosis everywhere in his work.


Play, Death, And Apotheosis, Kirby Farrell Prof Dec 1987

Play, Death, And Apotheosis, Kirby Farrell Prof

kirby farrell

This chapter develops the argument in "Self-Effacement and Autonomy in Sx," extending it to fantasies of apotheosis in the poems and plays.