The Aesthetic of Drama: And, Stalin's PlaysEnnes Publications, 1995 - 216 strani |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–3 od 13
Stran 39
... follows also : ' good art pleases us not ( necessarily ) because it is beautiful but because it is faithful . The question that should arise now is faith- ful to what ? i.e. does it refer to being faithful to the immediate original ' or ...
... follows also : ' good art pleases us not ( necessarily ) because it is beautiful but because it is faithful . The question that should arise now is faith- ful to what ? i.e. does it refer to being faithful to the immediate original ' or ...
Stran 85
... follows : " I have said that the day - dreamer carefully conceals his phantasies from other people because he feels he has reasons for being for being ashamed of them . I should now add that even if he were to communicate them to us he ...
... follows : " I have said that the day - dreamer carefully conceals his phantasies from other people because he feels he has reasons for being for being ashamed of them . I should now add that even if he were to communicate them to us he ...
Stran 103
... follows : 1. the satisfaction which determines the judgement of taste is is disinterested ; ( but ) 2. the satisfaction in the pleasant is bound up with interest . This settles the old question of whether an appreciation of beauty ...
... follows : 1. the satisfaction which determines the judgement of taste is is disinterested ; ( but ) 2. the satisfaction in the pleasant is bound up with interest . This settles the old question of whether an appreciation of beauty ...
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
19th century acting actor aesthetic Aristotle art critics art for art's art piece art's sake artist audience beauty become Bertrand Russell called Chalukyas character Chola classical consumer of art create art creation culture dance dialogue drama dramatic literature dramatists Duryodhana Elavarkulali emotional enjoyment epic expression fact feelings Greek Hegel Hindu historical plays human idea imagination imitation instinct intellectual James Joyce judgement Kanchi Kulakkolundu later literary means mind modern art moral Nagappattinam Nataka nature object obscenity Oscar Wilde painting Pallava performance person philosophers Plato playwright pleases pleasure plot poem poetic poetry poets produce psychological purpose radio Rajendra reaction reader reality religion role romantic romanticism Ruskin Russell Sambandam Sanskrit says sculpture Sembian sense Shakespeare Silappadikaram social plays Sophocles speech stage Stalin story sublime Sudarkkodi symbol Tamil Tamil literature taste theatre theme theory thought tion tragedy tragic truth ugliness Urmila Vajrabodhi Vegavati viewer Walter Pater word write wrote