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Index
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication Page
Contents
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Preface - Why this Book was Written
Part I: The Pivotal Position of Hamlet
Hamlet's Enigmas
Chapter One - Hamlet: The Inability to Mourn and the Inability to Love
Part II: The Poet and his Calling
Chapter Two - A Midsummer Night's Dream: How Shakespeare Won the Right to Write Plays
Chapter Three - The Tempest: The Abdication of Creativity
Chapter Four - Timon of Athens: The Loss of Creativity
Part III: The Oedipus Complex
Chapter Five - Richard III: The Oedipus Complex and the Villain
Chapter Six - Julius Caesar and Freud's Totem and Taboo
Chapter Seven - Macbeth: An Audacious Variant on the Oedipal Theme
Chapter Eight - Antony and Cleopatra: Dangerous Dotage
Chapter Nine - Coriolanus: An Astounding Description of a Destructive Mother–Child Relationship
Chapter Ten - King Lear: The Daughter as a Replacement for the Mother
Chapter Eleven - Richard II: Abdication as a Father's Reaction to the Oedipus Complex
Part IV: Intrapsychic Conflict
Chapter Twelve - Measure for Measure: The Disintegration of a Harsh Superego
Part V: The Battle Against Paranoia
Chapter Thirteen - Othello: Motiveless Malignity or Latent Homosexuality?
Chapter Fourteen - The Winter's Tale: Latent Homosexuality and Paranoia
Part VI: The Homosexual Compromise
Chapter Fifteen - The Merchant of Venice: A Portrayal of Masochistic Homosexuality
Chapter Sixteen - Twelfth Night: A Sublimation of Bisexuality in Homosexuality
References
Index
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