2018 - Storia e Letteratura
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Men's Busts and Women's Thighs : Anatomising the Body Politic in Shakespeare's Roman Plays
P. 67-86
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Informazioni
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Nello stesso volume
- The Illness of Shakespeare's Rome : An Introduction
- The noblest Roman of them all : Shakespeare's Interiority and the Secret Life of the Stage
- Like steel of too hard a temper : Shakespeare, Plutarch, and the Idea of Pristine Virtue in Livy
- From Valour to Counterpoise : Coriolanus' Machiavellian Moment
- Men's Busts and Women's Thighs : Anatomising the Body Politic in Shakespeare's Roman Plays
- Romanity and sparagmos in Titus Andronicus
- In Caesar's name pronounce I : Language and Power in Shakespeare's Roman Plays
- Renaissance England's View of Rome
- The Romes of Titus Andronicus
- An Overview of the Fashioning and Refashioning of Coriolanus' Romanitas from Modernity to Contemporaneity
- From Caesar to Brutus : A Note on Two Scripts of Ernesto Rossi's Giulio Cesare
- Conspiracies for Children : Julius Caesar in Retold Versions of the Last Two Centuries
- The Contemporary Past in Retakes on the Roman Plays : Recontextualising Themes and Modernising Character in David Lane's Work for Young People and for Community Promenade Performance
- Roman Shakespeare and Adaptation : A Short Survey of the Silent Films
- Abstracts
- Notes on Contributors
- Index of Names