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"Work, work your thoughts": Henry V RevisitedCoordination éditoriale de Sophie Chiari, Sophie Lemercier-Goddard |
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Acknowledgements Notes on Contributors General Introduction Part I: From Facts to Fiction: Recreative History 1. Henry V and Holinshed's Chronicles or the Dramatisation of Chronicle Writing Materials 2. 'Ciphers to this great account': Shorthand and the Depiction of History in Henry V 3. Eliding Military and Political History in Henry V 4. Remembering and Forgetting in Henry V Part II: The Rhetoric and Politics of Warfare: From Silence to Ostentation 5. 'Make Imaginary Puissance': Force, Labour and Imagination in Henry V 6. War and Ideology in Shakespeare’s Henry V 7. Of Pistols and Pikes: Weapons of War in Shakespeare’s Henry V Part III: Cultural and Social Representations: Fashioning the Self, Fashioning Others 8. 'Base Tick, call’st thou me host?’: Social Parasitism in Henry V 9. Defiling Locks: The Language of Rape and Sexual Violence in Henry V 10. Margins and Centre: Celtic Otherness and the Idea of Nation in Henry V Part IV: Imaginative Constructions: Beliefs and Perspectives 11. Bad Humours in Henry V 12. ‘That which you hear you’ll swear you see’: The Triumph of Illusion in Henry V 13. ‘Let us […] / On your imaginary forces work’: Persuasion, Perspective and Hypnosis 14. Myths of a Nation in The Hollow Crown: A Televisual Epic General Bibliography Index |
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