The Study of Shakespeare's Language: its Implications for Editors Critics and Translators
págs. 11-30
págs. 31-36
Gender, Grammar and Poetry: early 17th-Century Miscellanies in the Light of Historical Sociolinguistics
págs. 37-46
Strategies of Rebuttal in the Spelling Reform Debate: an Analysis of Richard Mulcaster's Denunciation of the Phonemic Reformers
págs. 47-52
Epistolary Formulae in Late Middle English Commercial Correspondence: the Cely Letters
págs. 53-60
English Verbs of Intellectual Activity in the Renaissance: a Cognitive Approach
págs. 61-66
págs. 69-88
págs. 89-96
págs. 97-104
págs. 105-110
The Meerie Lawes of 1646: The Parliament of Women as Lampoon and Subversion
págs. 111-120
John Cowell's Interpreter: Legal Tradition and Lexicographical Innovation
págs. 121-130
Towards a Definition of European Tragicomedy and Romantic Comedy of the Seventeenth Century: The Courtly Fashion in England and Spain
págs. 131-140
Parody, Satire and Quixotism in Beaumont's: The Knight of the Burning Pestle
págs. 141-152
The Will to Reform: Milton's and Verney's Educational Projects
págs. 153-158
págs. 159-164
Shakespeare's The Tempest: some Thought Experiments
págs. 167-184
Two Film Versions of Othello: a Twentieth-century Aproach to Shakespeare's Play
págs. 185-192
Of Power and Race and Sex - with due respect: on some Portuguese translations of Othelo
págs. 193-204
págs. 205-210
págs. 211-216
The Sins of the Fathers: Marlowe's Barabas and Shakespeare's Shylock
págs. 217-224
The Fismonger's Daughter Goes Crazy. I: the Domineering Father, the Mad Lover, and the Dead Mother
págs. 225-238
English Renaissance Studies in Spain: a Bibliography up to 1995
págs. 241-304
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