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Loreto Todd

    Loreto Todd est une professeure d'anglais renommée dont le travail approfondi explore la riche tapisserie de la littérature mondiale. Sa vaste archive, contenant plus de 12 millions de mots issus de diverses traditions linguistiques, constitue le fondement de ses recherches sur l'usage de la langue et les traditions orales. L'approche scientifique de Todd se concentre sur l'analyse des thèmes, des nuances stylistiques et des voix uniques qui émergent de diverses cultures. Elle se consacre actuellement à la traduction de textes pidgins et créoles, offrant aux lecteurs des aperçus profonds sur la diversité linguistique.

    Cameroon
    York Notes on Hamlet
    A Fire in His Head
    William Shakespeare, Twelfth night : notes
    English Grammar
    • A Fire in His Head

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,4(6)Évaluer

      Aengus, the god of love, embarks into the unknown in pursuit of the girl of his dreams. The result is a unique fantasy adventure that takes the theme of W. B. Yeats's poem The Song of Wandering Aengus as its motif, and draws into its telling a rich Celtic legacy of myth, legend, and language.This book is distributed for O'Brien Press, Dublin and is for sale only in the United States, it's territories and dependencies, Canada, and the Philippines.

      A Fire in His Head
    • York Notes on Hamlet

      • 120pages
      • 5 heures de lecture
      3,1(9)Évaluer

      Many consider the tragedy of "Hamlet" to be Shakespeare's masterpiece and one of the greatest plays of all time. It has entertained audiences for centuries and the role of Hamlet is one of the most sought after by actors. It is the story of Hamlet, the Prince of Denmark who learns of the death of his father at the hands of his uncle, Claudius. Claudius murders Hamlet's father, his own brother, to take the throne of Denmark and to marry Hamlet's widowed mother. Hamlet is sunk into a state of great despair as a result of discovering the murder of his father and the infidelity of his mother. Hamlet is torn between his great sadness and his desire for the revenge of his father's murder. "Hamlet" is a work of great complexity and as such has drawn many different critical interpretations. Hamlet has been seen as a victim of circumstance, as an impractical idealist, as the sufferer of an Oedipus complex, as an opportunist wishing to kill his Uncle not for revenge but to ascend to the throne, as the sufferer of a great melancholy, and as a man blinded by his desire for revenge. The true motivations of Hamlet are complex and enigmatic and have been debated for centuries. Read this classic tragedy and decide for yourself where Hamlet's true motivations lie and how they influence his ultimate demise.

      York Notes on Hamlet