| |
The Elizabethan theatre. / The Elizabethan theatre. Retrieved from http://www.don-juan.org/english/angleterre/la17m3f4.htm Accessed on 5 December, 2004
The Elizabethan and Jacobean Theater
Egendorf, Laura. 2000. "A Historical Overview of Elizabethan Drama." Elizabethan Drama. San Diego: Greenhaven Press.
Female Independence in Shakespeare's Works
Dusinberre, Justin. 2000. "Puritanism and Its Impact on the Depecition of Woman in Elizabethan Drama." Elizabethan Drama. San Diego: Greenhaven Press.
Female Independence in Shakespeare's Works
Egendorf, Laura. "A Historical Overview of Elizabethan Drama." Elizabethan Drama. San Diego: Greenhaven Press, Inc. 2000.
Doctor Faustus
phocles, p. 17). In this case, the chorus is not reporting, but comforting. In conclusion, when it becomes clear that Oedipus' fate is disastrous and his fate is tragic, and that he has married his mother and killed his father, and after he gouges out his
"Oedipus Rex"
|
|