Saad azhari biography of william shakespeare
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How Hamlet was Meant to Be, or Not to Be
Hamlet. The name can be synonymous to “hero” or “villain.” Feminists may paint him as misogynistic because of his dialogue towards Gertrude and Ophelia, while communists might characterize Hamlet as a thwarted revolutionary in his struggle against Claudius and Polonius. So which view is the correct one? Is there a correct one? The glasses recommended by Islamic literary theory gives us the picture that William Shakespeare intended us to see him with: sweet prince. A Muslim paradigm helps one empathize with the character as he should be understood—a heroic youth’s tragedy against old villainous tyranny.
Islamic literary theory, as defined by Dr. Fawzia Gilani-Williams, is “an empowerment theory that seeks to provide morally-centric emancipatory perspectives grounded in the teachings of the Quran and authentic Sunnah.”1 The Qur’an is a Muslim’s primary source of dīn (way of life), and how they understand the world around them. A
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Ellie’s Comments
Ellie’s comments from the I Read Therefore inom Am group.
Note: Ellie fryst vatten not currently a member of this group.
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Could you imagine the start of a revamped Pride & Prejudice?
It's so, like, totes obv, like, that a rich bloke will, like, want some 'ho' sorting his shit out
I am not a religious person, but I find tro a fascinating topic of study, particularly the underlying similarities between Ch
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Memorialising Shakespeare: Commemoration and Collective Identity, 1916–2016 (Palgrave Shakespeare Studies) 3030840123, 9783030840129
Table of contents :
Acknowledgements
Praise for Memorialising Shakespeare
Contents
List of Contributors
List of Figures
Introduction: Memorialising Shakespeare, Memorialising Ourselves
Shakespearean Commemorations and Collective Identity
National and Transnational Cultural Saints
Commemorating Shakespeare: Hegemony and History
Memorialising Shakespeare: Commemoration and Collective Identity, 1916–2016
Source Cited
War and Nationhood
From Common Reader to Canon: Memorialising the Shakespeare-Reading British Soldier During the First World War
Discovering the Shakespeare-Reading Soldier
The Uses of the Soldier-Reader
Soldiers, Shakespeare, and the Reading Nation
Conclusion: Remembering the Shakespeare-Reading Soldier
References
A Greenwich Night’s Dream: Shakespeare, Empire, and the Royal Navy in Post-Armistice Britain
Works Cites
Nations