Incoming Resources
- Euripidean drama;, myth, theme and structure, D.J. Conacher
- Shakespeare's character-dramatists, a study of a character type in Shakespearean tragedy through Hamlet, Lillian Wilds
- The Oresteia, a study in language and structure, Anne Lebeck
- The theory of drama
- The heroic image in five Shakespearean tragedies, by Matthew N. Proser
- The dramatic technique of Antoine de Montchrestien., Rhetoric and style in French renaissance tragedy, Richard Griffiths
- Patterns in Shakespearian tragedy
- Tragic form in Shakespeare
- The heroes of Shakespeare's tragedies, Victor L. Cahn
- William Shakespeare, edited, with an introduction, by Harold Bloom
- Opposing absolutes, conviction and convention in John Ford's plays, by Florence Ali
- Character in relation to action in the tragedies of George Chapman, by Derek Crawley
- The art of loving, female subjectivity and male discursive traditions in Shakespeare's tragedies, Evelyn Gajowski
- The violence of pity in Euripides' Medea, Pietro Pucci
- Euripides and the instruction of the Athenians, Justina Gregory
- Biblical references in Shakespeare's tragedies, Naseeb Shaheen
- An introduction to Sophocles, by T.B.L. Webster ..
- Hamlet and the philosophy of literary criticism
- The royal play of Macbeth;, when, why, and how it was written by Shakespeare
- Essays on Aristotle's Poetics, edited by Amélie Oksenberg Rorty
- Aeschylean tragedy., Berkeley, University of California Press, 1924
- Shakespeare's tragedies of love:, an examination of the possibility of common readings of 'Romeo and Juliet', 'Othello', 'King Lear' & 'Anthony and Cleopatra', by H.A. Mason
- Hamlet's enemy, madness and myth in Hamlet, Theodore Lidz
- A new creed, fundamental religious beliefs in the Athenian polis and Euripidean drama, Harvey Yunis
- Readings on the tragedies of William Shakespeare, Clarice Swisher, book editor
- Christopher Marlowe's Tamburlaine, part one and part two;, text and major criticism., Edited by Irving Ribner
- Euripides and the full circle of myth, Cedric H. Whitman
- Ironic drama, a study of Euripides' method and meaning, Philip H. Vellacott
- Hamlet, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- The art of Aeschylus, Thomas G. Rosenmeyer
- The political background of Aeschylean tragedy, Anthony J. Podlecki
- Assassin on stage, Brutus, Hamlet, and the death of Lincoln, Albert Furtwangler
- Aristotle on tragic and comic mimesis, Leon Golden
- Shakespeare's mature tragedies
- Aeschylus,, the creator of tragedy, by Gilbert Murray ..
- William Shakespeare's Macbeth, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Shakespearean tragedy and its double, the rhythms of audience response, Kent Cartwright
- Heinrich von Kleist;, a study in tragedy and anxiety
- Tragedy and civilization, an interpretation of Sophocles, Charles Segal
- If it were done, Macbeth and tragic action, James L. Calderwood
- Biblical influences in Shakespeare's great tragedies, Peter Milward
- The question of Hamlet
- Our naked frailties;, sensational art and meaning in Macbeth, Paul A. Jorgensen
- Sophocles and Pericles
- Tragedy and the Jacobean temper: the major plays of John Webster, by Richard Bodtke
- Shakespearean tragedy and gender, edited by Shirley Nelson Garner and Madelon Sprengnether
- An essay on King Lear, S.L. Goldberg
- Boundaries of Dionysus;, Athenian foundations for the theory of tragedy
- John Webster: politics and tragedy, Robert P. Griffin
- Moral perspectives in Webster's major tragedies, Joseph Henry Stodder