Renaissance Figures of SpeechSylvia Adamson, Gavin Alexander, Katrin Ettenhuber Cambridge University Press, 20 дек. 2007 г. The Renaissance saw a renewed and energetic engagement with classical rhetoric; recent years have seen a similar revival of interest in Renaissance rhetoric. As Renaissance critics recognised, figurative language is the key area of intersection between rhetoric and literature. This book is the first modern account of Renaissance rhetoric to focus solely on the figures of speech. It reflects a belief that the figures exemplify the larger concerns of rhetoric, and connect, directly or by analogy, to broader cultural and philosophical concerns within early modern society. Thirteen authoritative contributors have selected a rhetorical figure with a special currency in Renaissance writing and have used it as a key to one of the period's characteristic modes of perception, forms of argument, states of feeling or styles of reading. |
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Стр. 23
... influence of the educational revolution soon pervaded vernacular literature too, going well beyond the obvious classicisation of themes and genrestoaffectitsrhetoricalandlinguisticstructure.Thoughtoolittlework has yet been done in ...
... influence of the educational revolution soon pervaded vernacular literature too, going well beyond the obvious classicisation of themes and genrestoaffectitsrhetoricalandlinguisticstructure.Thoughtoolittlework has yet been done in ...
Стр. 26
... influential mediator, whose annotated edition of 1536 was standard issue in English schools, argued that all the methods of varying in Book 1 could be 'referred wholly to three-fold synonymy, that is, of words, construction, and figures ...
... influential mediator, whose annotated edition of 1536 was standard issue in English schools, argued that all the methods of varying in Book 1 could be 'referred wholly to three-fold synonymy, that is, of words, construction, and figures ...
Стр. 27
... influenced by literary rhetoric or as a parallel manifestation of a more general stylistic zeitgeist.38 In both music and literature, the theme-variation relation was often imaged in terms of the body and its clothing. Peacham, in the ...
... influenced by literary rhetoric or as a parallel manifestation of a more general stylistic zeitgeist.38 In both music and literature, the theme-variation relation was often imaged in terms of the body and its clothing. Peacham, in the ...
Стр. 30
... influential antithesis of 'wit' and 'judgment': Wit lying most in the Assemblage of Ideas, and putting those together with quickness and variety, wherein can be found any resemblance or congruity...Judgment, on the contrary, lies quite ...
... influential antithesis of 'wit' and 'judgment': Wit lying most in the Assemblage of Ideas, and putting those together with quickness and variety, wherein can be found any resemblance or congruity...Judgment, on the contrary, lies quite ...
Стр. 40
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Renaissance Figures of Speech Sylvia Adamson,Gavin Alexander,Katrin Ettenhuber Ограниченный просмотр - 2007 |
Renaissance Figures of Speech Sylvia Adamson,Gavin Alexander,Katrin Ettenhuber Недоступно для просмотра - 2011 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
amplification Andrewes antanaclasis argument Aristotle audience authority Bacon Britomart Brutus’s Caesar catachresis century chapter character Cicero classical clauses conflated copia defined definition describe difficulty doth early-modern ekphrasis Elizabethan elocutio English Erasmus Erasmus’s example fiction figuration figurative figure figure of speech final finally find first Garden of Eloquence Greek hath Henry Peacham hyperbaton hyperbole hyperbole’s hysteron proteron identified imagination influence influential John Jonson judgement language Latin linguistic literary Lucrece Macbeth meaning metalepsis metaphor metonymy mind modern moral orator paradiastole parallel parison paronomasia periodic sentence person philosophical phrase play poetic poets preposterous prose prosopopoeia puns Puttenham Quintilian reader reading reflect Renaissance Rhetorica ad Herennium rhetorical rhetorical figure rhetorical theory semantic sense Shakespeare Sidney Sidney’s significance sixteenth-century speaking specifically structure style syllepsis syncrisis synonymia synonyms syntactic testimony things thought tion treatise tropes turn verse vices Virgil virtue Vives voice words writing