Faust: Out Walking: Difference between revisions

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==Notes==
==Notes==
Gretchen is a diminutive oth the German Margarete.  She is refered to as Gretchen throughout the play.
Gretchen is a diminutive oth the German Margarete.  She is refered to as Gretchen throughout the play.  Goethe "requested that Margarete become Gretchen" (Champagne).


In line 2623, Mehisto is refering to the wooden horse that entered Troy and captured it; "Why look a gift horse, in the mouth?."(582).
In line 2623, Mehisto is refering to the wooden horse that entered Troy and captured it; "Why look a gift horse, in the mouth?."(582).
Faust does not limit himself to power in any way: " he increases it through his seduction of Gretchen" (Van Der Laan).


==Commentary==
==Commentary==
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==Works Cited==
==Works Cited==
Barbler, Jules & Carre, Michel.  Fasut. ''Opera News''.  (2005)


Bohm, Arnd.  ''Goethe'' and Patriarchy: ''Faust'' and the Fates of Desire.  ''Seminar--A Journal of Germanic Studies''.  (2005).


Champagne, Roland A.  An Etical Model in a Postmodern ''Faust'': The Daemonic Parody of the Politics of Friendship in Thomas  Mann's Doctor Faustus.  ''Style''.  (2000)
Champagne, Roland A.  An Etical Model in a Postmodern ''Faust'': The Daemonic Parody of the Politics of Friendship in Thomas  Mann's Doctor Faustus.  ''Style''.  (2000)