Where There's A Will There's A Way: Or, All I Really Need to Know I Learned from ShakespearePenguin, 30 окт. 2007 г. - Всего страниц: 224 When life becomes one big drama, let history's greatest life coach help you rewrite it. Bard expert Laurie Maguire brings her knowledge and love of Shakespeare to bear on the great-and small-challenges that all readers face today. As she illustrates in this witty, accessible, and unique self-help book, all one really needs is Shakespeare when it comes to understanding life. Covering such universal subjects as identity, the battle of the sexes, family relationships, love, loss and death, Maguire shows how the dilemmas illustrated in Shakespeare's plays can help readers explore their own emotions and judgments. Together, Maguire and Shakespeare offer suggestions, comfort, empathy, and encouragement as they set out a timeless principle for living. To read Shakespeare is to understand what it means to be human. To read Where There's a Will There's a Way is to better understand how to deal with it. |
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... has not been fashionable for professional Shakespearians to talk about Shakespeare characters as if they were real people living real lives. (They are not, of course; but, as critic Robert N. Watson points out, we are.)
... has not been fashionable for professional Shakespearians to talk about Shakespeare characters as if they were real people living real lives. (They are not, of course; but, as critic Robert N. Watson points out, we are.)
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... lives also revolves around the palpable emotional realities of character and situation. With Shakespeare, as with life, we're simply trying to get our heads round the thoughts and nature of the woman who rejects a man, the guy who ...
... lives also revolves around the palpable emotional realities of character and situation. With Shakespeare, as with life, we're simply trying to get our heads round the thoughts and nature of the woman who rejects a man, the guy who ...
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... lives are simply stories whose conclusions are not yet scripted, and we are characters in our own dramas. We live our lives through stories. When we ask our partner or roommate, “How was your day?” what we are really saying is: “Tell me ...
... lives are simply stories whose conclusions are not yet scripted, and we are characters in our own dramas. We live our lives through stories. When we ask our partner or roommate, “How was your day?” what we are really saying is: “Tell me ...
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... live other people's stories. Like all good storytellers, like all good life coaches, Shakespeare doesn't legislate ... lives; he helps us discover ourselves. One IDENTITY Who is it that can tell me who.
... live other people's stories. Like all good storytellers, like all good life coaches, Shakespeare doesn't legislate ... lives; he helps us discover ourselves. One IDENTITY Who is it that can tell me who.
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... live up to (if good) or refute (if bad) the meanings of their names. The French author Montaigne (1533-92), whose essays were translated into English in 1603, gives an example of the kind of effect good names could have. A licentious ...
... live up to (if good) or refute (if bad) the meanings of their names. The French author Montaigne (1533-92), whose essays were translated into English in 1603, gives an example of the kind of effect good names could have. A licentious ...
Содержание
Two FAMILY | |
COMEDY | |
TRAGEDY | |
Seven ACCEPTANCE | |
Nine JEALOUSY | |
Eleven FORGIVENESS | |
Thirteen MATURITY | |
Epilogue | |
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Where There's a Will There's a Way: Or, All I Really Need to Know I Learned ... Laurie E. Maguire Ограниченный просмотр - 2006 |
Where There's a Will There's a Way: Or, All I Really Need to Know I Learned ... Laurie Maguire Недоступно для просмотра - 2007 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
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