The Anatomy of Criticism: A TrialogueSimon and Schuster, 1933 - 303 strani Examines the nature of literary criticism and appreciation. |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 17
Stran 56
... ment " are continually making judgments themselves , though they lack the candor to admit it . Why do they hand down very definite judgments and dislike to be regarded as doing so ? The reason is 56 THE ANATOMY OF CRITICISM.
... ment " are continually making judgments themselves , though they lack the candor to admit it . Why do they hand down very definite judgments and dislike to be regarded as doing so ? The reason is 56 THE ANATOMY OF CRITICISM.
Stran 182
... ment . What lies behind this endless search for " standards " -as even Arnold betrays - is the pathetic yearning for infallibility , which , alas , is not to be attained by mortal man . There is no external or objective " standard ...
... ment . What lies behind this endless search for " standards " -as even Arnold betrays - is the pathetic yearning for infallibility , which , alas , is not to be attained by mortal man . There is no external or objective " standard ...
Stran 206
... ment of criticism . When Margaret Fuller - long anticipating Croce - wrote in 1846 that the highest critics " enter into the nature of another being and judge his work by its own law " , she was virtually saying that they do not judge ...
... ment of criticism . When Margaret Fuller - long anticipating Croce - wrote in 1846 that the highest critics " enter into the nature of another being and judge his work by its own law " , she was virtually saying that they do not judge ...
Vsebina
Criticisms Right to Exist 7 | 7 |
The Critics Function | 35 |
Objectivity or Subjectivity? | 77 |
Avtorske pravice | |
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admirable Aeschylus aesthetic argument Aristotle Arthur artist believe better bourgeois Brunetière cism course creative Croce Croceans culture economic Edgar Guest Elder ence example exist expression fact feel function genius Goethe Gulliver's Travels I. A. Richards idea imagine individual infallible insist Irving Babbitt judge judgment Jules Lemaître knowledge least Lemaître less literary literature living logic matter Matthew Arnold mean ment merely merits Middleton never novel objective opinion Oscar Wilde painting past perhaps poem poet poetry possible posterity precisely question ranking reader realism reason recognize remarked Remy de Gourmont reputation reviewer Rex Beach Sainte-Beuve seems sense Shakespeare simply social mind sound standards suppose surely T. S. Eliot talent talk taste technique tell theory thing thought tion Tolstoy tradition true truth whole words writer Young