An Essential Discipline: An Introduction to Literary Criticism |
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 3 из 49
Стр. 31
THE IDEA OF TRADITION AND THE IDEA OF ' PROGRESS ' The word ' preservation ' carries with it all kinds of implications for the literary student , and for the citizen . For we are constantly faced by the contribution of the past to the ...
THE IDEA OF TRADITION AND THE IDEA OF ' PROGRESS ' The word ' preservation ' carries with it all kinds of implications for the literary student , and for the citizen . For we are constantly faced by the contribution of the past to the ...
Стр. 211
Each novelist had to contribute parts of himself to the establishing of a new tradition . The first novels , like the earliest epic poetry , were great sprawling affairs , with little shape or order . Decades of refinement and hard work ...
Each novelist had to contribute parts of himself to the establishing of a new tradition . The first novels , like the earliest epic poetry , were great sprawling affairs , with little shape or order . Decades of refinement and hard work ...
Стр. 240
Ian Watt's description of the English tradition could be extended to take in all the novels I have mentioned . ... the tradition to look for and , charges of selfrighteousness notwithstanding , likely to lead to work of the greatest ...
Ian Watt's description of the English tradition could be extended to take in all the novels I have mentioned . ... the tradition to look for and , charges of selfrighteousness notwithstanding , likely to lead to work of the greatest ...
Отзывы - Написать отзыв
Не удалось найти ни одного отзыва.
Содержание
THE FUNCTION OF CRITICISM | 35 |
AN APPROACH TO DRAMA I 20 | 120 |
S AN APPROACH TO THE NOVEL | 182 |
Авторские права | |
Не показаны другие разделы: 1
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
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