Item
Publication
Themes of some Natural Elements in Shakespearean Sonnets.
- Title
- Themes of some Natural Elements in Shakespearean Sonnets.
- Abstract
-
The aim of research is to explain the relationship between an author and
the imagery he or she uses. It sheds light on the rhetorical nature of
Shakespeare’s references to birds, trees, the mountains, the sea and sky, will
reveal a fundamental approach to order and the universe. These images are also
related to what Shakespeare and the Elizabethans called nature, and the
distinction between nature and art. The distinction was much debated in the
poet’s own time. Our study argues that, while Shakespeare acknowledged what
he saw as innate and natural tendencies, nature is subject to the human will, and
must be perfected by art. This affects his imaginary representations of the natural
world in the sonnets. This world cannot be separated from the linguistic and
literary conventions of his day, and is related to the already disappearing
Renaissance world view.
In this research the emphasis of some authors on Shakespeare's Imagery
as a poet of the countryside is corrected. Not all the instances of nature imagery
in the sonnets will be addressed. Nature images, whether of the sun, the sea, the
seasons, or flowers, etc., are central to about 11 of the 154 poems published in
1609. - Scientific Type
- اكاديمي
- Journal volume
- المؤتمر الطلابي الثاني
- Collaboration type
- مشترك
- Publish Date
- April 27, 2023
- Participated Universities (Publication)
-
Alnoor University
- Scopus status
- Not in Scopus
- Clarivate status
- Not In Clarivate
- Pub. Med. status
- Not In PubMed
- Author (Publication)
- محمد عبد الله داؤد صالح
- Journal (Publication)
- المؤتمر الطلابي الثاني / كلية النور الجامعة في 27/4/2023
- Publisher (Publication)
- كلية النور الجامعة
- ISSN
- ISBN: 978-9922-8581-0-4
- Country (Publication)
-
Iraq
- Country type
- داخل العراق
- College (Publication)
-
College of Education
- Departement (Publication)
-
Department of English Language
- Media
-
Academic Paper
Part of Themes of some Natural Elements in Shakespearean Sonnets.