Literature as ExperienceMcGraw-Hill, 1959 - 325 sider |
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Side 42
... moved to laughter at a work of his which he regarded as a tragedy ! An author has failed no less for having moved his readers to an in- appropriate emotion than for his having failed to move them 42 LITERATURE AS EXPERIENCE.
... moved to laughter at a work of his which he regarded as a tragedy ! An author has failed no less for having moved his readers to an in- appropriate emotion than for his having failed to move them 42 LITERATURE AS EXPERIENCE.
Side 44
... moved without allowing his intelligence to be sentimentalized is in the best position to appreciate literature . 994 Some critics , like Wellek and Warren , insist that " for proper readers , literature does not and should not incite ...
... moved without allowing his intelligence to be sentimentalized is in the best position to appreciate literature . 994 Some critics , like Wellek and Warren , insist that " for proper readers , literature does not and should not incite ...
Side 93
... moved out of the station slowly . It crept onward among ruinous houses and over the twinkling river . At West- land Row Station a crowd of people pressed to the carriage doors ; but the porters moved them back , saying that it was a ...
... moved out of the station slowly . It crept onward among ruinous houses and over the twinkling river . At West- land Row Station a crowd of people pressed to the carriage doors ; but the porters moved them back , saying that it was a ...
Indhold
The Individual and Experience | 3 |
The Physical Nature of the Individual | 15 |
Adaptive and Emotional Behavior | 29 |
Copyright | |
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Literature as Experience Wallace a 1914- Bacon,Robert S Joint Author Breen Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2021 |
Literature as Experience Wallace a 1914- Bacon,Robert S Joint Author Breen Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2021 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
action aesthetic experience alliteration anapest Annabel Lee attitudes behavior Brace and Company breathing called chapter characters course critic dramatic Emily Dickinson emotions ence example expression eyes feel figure free verse gestures GIRL give Harcourt Hello-out human iambic pentameter images imitation interest interpretation James Joyce Katherine Anne Porter kind King language listen literature look MacLain meaning ment metonymy Miss Melanctha movement nature object onomatopoeia oral reader particular pattern perception perhaps personality phrase play Plez poem poet poetry point of view prosody Psychology Quoted by permission reading response rhyme rhythm scene seems sense Shakespeare snake Snowdie social sound speak speaker speech stanza story stress suggested syllable symbolic synecdoche talk tell tensions thing tion trimeter trochees understanding University Press verbal verse voice W. K. Wimsatt Well-Lighted Place Werner Wolff Willie Francis words writer York YOUNG