Discourse: Berkeley Journal for Theoretical Studies in Media and Culture, Oplag 6–9Indiana University Press, 1979 |
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Side 61
... effect , rare in nature , which can be defined as the temporary rupture of a quite ordinary solitude . " 16 The promise of collectivity is nothing more than an effect , to be sure , and thus in the realm of ideol- ogy , but nevertheless ...
... effect , rare in nature , which can be defined as the temporary rupture of a quite ordinary solitude . " 16 The promise of collectivity is nothing more than an effect , to be sure , and thus in the realm of ideol- ogy , but nevertheless ...
Side 79
... effect . The suggestion for example in point of view anal- yses of " insertion " as a way of explaining the subject's relationship to narrative reinscribes the narrative as cause . This re - inscription planes over the contradictions of ...
... effect . The suggestion for example in point of view anal- yses of " insertion " as a way of explaining the subject's relationship to narrative reinscribes the narrative as cause . This re - inscription planes over the contradictions of ...
Side 80
... effect into affect , the affect into effect . There is a tendency to look for the effects of the text in the symp- toms of the viewer - usually by giving emphasis to the visible re- sults of viewing and to extrapolate from that the ...
... effect into affect , the affect into effect . There is a tendency to look for the effects of the text in the symp- toms of the viewer - usually by giving emphasis to the visible re- sults of viewing and to extrapolate from that the ...
Indhold
About Our Contributors | 3 |
Helke Sander and the Will to Change | 10 |
The Power of the Narrator in Modernist | 31 |
Copyright | |
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