An Essential Discipline: An Introduction to Literary Criticism |
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Стр. 59
We might explore , say , women's magazines , and make all kinds of discoveries about the values of our society ; those magazines contain a good deal of homely decency in amongst the bone - shaking sentimentality .
We might explore , say , women's magazines , and make all kinds of discoveries about the values of our society ; those magazines contain a good deal of homely decency in amongst the bone - shaking sentimentality .
Стр. 176
A whole society sways with the decisions and actions of these characters . Proctor's choice to destroy his confession is one of the gestures which broke theocracy in the province . But Miller is not only writing of a situation that is ...
A whole society sways with the decisions and actions of these characters . Proctor's choice to destroy his confession is one of the gestures which broke theocracy in the province . But Miller is not only writing of a situation that is ...
Стр. 207
It bespeaks also the new concern with society as an aggregation of individuals , and as something to be recorded enthusiastically . From the Restoration onwards , a great crop of periodicals , journals and newspapers appear in English ...
It bespeaks also the new concern with society as an aggregation of individuals , and as something to be recorded enthusiastically . From the Restoration onwards , a great crop of periodicals , journals and newspapers appear in English ...
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THE FUNCTION OF CRITICISM | 35 |
AN APPROACH TO DRAMA I 20 | 120 |
S AN APPROACH TO THE NOVEL | 182 |
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An Essential Discipline: An Introduction to Literary Criticism Fred Inglis Недоступно для просмотра - 1968 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
action Antony attitudes audience beauty become begin belief better called century changes characters civilization comes complete course criticism culture deal death describes drama effect Elizabethan English essential example experience expression fact feeling felt finally force give greatest hard human ideas important individual intelligence Jane Jonson judge judgement kind language less literary literature living look manner matter mean mind moral move nature never novel novelist once ourselves particular passion past perhaps play poem poet poetic poetry political possible present prose reader reading reason religious remark response rhythms seems sense shape social society speak speech spirit story sure theme things thought tion tone tradition turn understanding values voice whole writing