Ill Seen, Well Said (On the Uses of Rhetoric in Julius Caesar and Coriolanus)
Knowledge and mastery of rhetoric played an important social role in Elizabethan England. In two of Shakespeare's plays studied here, Julius Caesar and Coriolanus, various aspects of (ab)uses of rhetorical skills come to the fore. Problems such as whether the nature of language is contingent or...
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Matična publikacija: |
Studia Romanica et Anglica Zagrabiensia 43 (1998), - ; str. 161-171 |
Glavni autor: | Brlek, Tomislav (-) |
Vrsta građe: | Članak |
Jezik: | eng |
APA stil citiranja
Brlek, T. (1998). Ill Seen, Well Said (On the Uses of Rhetoric in Julius Caesar and Coriolanus): Ill Seen, Well Said (On the Uses of Rhetoric in Julius Caesar and Coriolanus). Studia Romanica et Anglica Zagrabiensia, p. 3.
Chicago stil citiranjaBrlek, Tomislav. "Ill Seen, Well Said (On the Uses of Rhetoric in Julius Caesar and Coriolanus): Ill Seen, Well Said (On the Uses of Rhetoric in Julius Caesar and Coriolanus)." 1998: 3.
MLA stil citiranjaBrlek, Tomislav. "Ill Seen, Well Said (On the Uses of Rhetoric in Julius Caesar and Coriolanus): Ill Seen, Well Said (On the Uses of Rhetoric in Julius Caesar and Coriolanus)." 1998: 3.