The Critic's NotebookRobert Wooster Stallman University of Minnesota Press, 1950 - 303 strani |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 50
Stran 72
... method , which is too obvious to need com- ment . There is , third , the logical method in which the stanzas or lines of a poem follow logically from their predecessors . This method of development was characteristic of the seventeenth ...
... method , which is too obvious to need com- ment . There is , third , the logical method in which the stanzas or lines of a poem follow logically from their predecessors . This method of development was characteristic of the seventeenth ...
Stran 129
... method was a definite method not confined to Italy ; and the fact , appar- ently paradoxical , that the allegorical method makes for simplicity and intelligibility . We incline to think of allegory as a tiresome cross - word puzzle . We ...
... method was a definite method not confined to Italy ; and the fact , appar- ently paradoxical , that the allegorical method makes for simplicity and intelligibility . We incline to think of allegory as a tiresome cross - word puzzle . We ...
Stran 203
... method which others must pursue after him . They will not be imitators , any more than the scientist who uses the discoveries of Einstein in pursuing his own , independent , further investigations . It is simply a way of controlling ...
... method which others must pursue after him . They will not be imitators , any more than the scientist who uses the discoveries of Einstein in pursuing his own , independent , further investigations . It is simply a way of controlling ...
Vsebina
Kinds of Criticism | 16 |
Scholarship and Literary Criticism | 23 |
The Contemporaneousness of Criticism | 33 |
Avtorske pravice | |
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actual aesthetic artist attitude beauty become belief character communication complete concerned conscious Copyright course created Criticism definition direct edited effect elements emotion English Essays existence experience expression Faber fact feeling function give Harcourt human idea imaginative important intention interest interpretation John judgment kind knowledge language less Letters literary Literary Criticism literature logical matter meaning merely method mind nature never Note novel object once Oxford particular past Philosophical play poem poet poet's poetic poetry possible practice present principle problem produced publisher pure question reader reality reason reference regard relation Reprinted by permission Review Richards Scrutiny seems Selected sense simply sound statement suggest symbol T. S. ELIOT theory thing thought tion true truth understanding University Press vision whole writing