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Dramatic Art and Irony in Seneca's De Providentia

open access: yesL'antiquité classique, 1973
Motto Anna-Lydia, Clarke John R. Dramatic Art and Irony in Seneca's De Providentia. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 42, fasc. 1, 1973. pp. 28-35.
Motto, Anna-Lydia, Clarke, John R.
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Verbal irony in Shakespeare’s dramatic works

Human Cognitive Processing, 2011
The present study of Shakespeare’s use of irony refers to two theories, first, the echoic mention theory, which assumes that a speech act is ironic when the speaker mentions or echoes an earlier utterance in order to express an attitude of contempt or ridicule towards it, and, second, the theory of irony according to which the ironic speaker pretends ...
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Three Types of Dramatic Irony

2023
Timo Airaksinen, Airaksinen Timo
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Oedipus curses upon the murderer: Dramatic irony

International Journal of Research in English, 2021
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Dramatic Irony

1992
Abstract At 8.523ff. thunder and lightning occur in a clear sky, and clashing arms are seen. Aeneas remembers Venus' words and interprets the omen: war is imminent, and his mother will now bring him arms forged by Vulcan. With his Arcadian allies he leaves Pallanteum and camps in a numinous grove within sight of Tarcho and the Etruscans,
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