Tropic Crucible: Self and Theory in Language and LiteratureRanjit Chatterjee, Colin Nicholson Singapore University Press, National University of Singapore, 1984 - 382 páginas |
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Página 39
... created freely . That is , hearers can entertain any conjecture whatever about the meaning of an utterance which is weakly consonant with the context ; ( c ) The meaning of an utterance is its effective meaning , that given it by the ...
... created freely . That is , hearers can entertain any conjecture whatever about the meaning of an utterance which is weakly consonant with the context ; ( c ) The meaning of an utterance is its effective meaning , that given it by the ...
Página 55
... created context did not embrace this created meaning , then not only is the hearer creating the meaning of the utterance , but in doing so he is enabling the speaker to discover what he might have meant to mean . If the speaker had ...
... created context did not embrace this created meaning , then not only is the hearer creating the meaning of the utterance , but in doing so he is enabling the speaker to discover what he might have meant to mean . If the speaker had ...
Página 249
... created by Coleridge in " Kubla Khan " and the mythological landscape created by Shelley in Prometheus Unbound may actually coincide with the oriental realities they purport to describe . The very real possibility exists that the images ...
... created by Coleridge in " Kubla Khan " and the mythological landscape created by Shelley in Prometheus Unbound may actually coincide with the oriental realities they purport to describe . The very real possibility exists that the images ...
Contenido
Narcissism and the Limits of the Lyric Self | 3 |
The Case | 25 |
For our Selves we are Silent | 37 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Tropic Crucible: Self and Theory in Language and Literature Ranjit Chatterjee,Colin Nicholson Vista previa limitada - 1984 |
Tropic Crucible: Self and Theory in Language and Literature Ranjit Chatterjee,Colin Nicholson Vista de fragmentos - 1984 |
Términos y frases comunes
abstract analysis Anglo-Indian arbitrariness believe British characters clause Coleridge colonial concept context Cowper created critical culture Daneš différance discourse Dream Dream Songs elements English essay example expatriate experience fact fiction Firbas Functional Sentence Perspective grammatical Gravity's Rainbow hearer hymn icon ideophonic imaginative India interpretation John Jones Jones's Kashmir Kubla Khan Kwang Meng lines linguistic literary literature London Lord Jim lyric meaning metaphor mystical narrator natural languages Nietzsche novel Oedipa Oriental parable philosopher poem poet poetic poetry possible present Prometheus Unbound Pynchon question Rasselas reader reading reference relation rheme Saint Jack seems segments semantic sense Sgall Shelley signifier Singapore Skunk Hour skunks sound symbolism speaker spirit stanza story structure suggests syllables syntactic syntax T.S. Eliot thematic theme theory Theroux tradition truth University utterance V.S. Naipaul verb verse William Cowper words writing