Tropic Crucible: Self and Theory in Language and LiteratureRanjit Chatterjee, Colin Nicholson Singapore University Press, National University of Singapore, 1984 - 382 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 17
Página 354
... narrator told us everything he knew , seeming to know everything ? Our lack of understanding cannot , therefore , be his fault . ) - Looking at this matter from another angle : the narrator is entirely employed - used up in the process ...
... narrator told us everything he knew , seeming to know everything ? Our lack of understanding cannot , therefore , be his fault . ) - Looking at this matter from another angle : the narrator is entirely employed - used up in the process ...
Página 362
... narrator with his world , and points of association for the reader with this narrator ; each is plausible for as long as it lasts . The Beckett trilogy might conceivably have continued forever , but the Zen piece resoundingly concludes ...
... narrator with his world , and points of association for the reader with this narrator ; each is plausible for as long as it lasts . The Beckett trilogy might conceivably have continued forever , but the Zen piece resoundingly concludes ...
Página 373
... narrator has been in hell the while . But what of the dreadful irony that all through this time in hell , right to the irrelevant end , the protagonist has not known that he was damned ? This seems quite consonant with the picture of ...
... narrator has been in hell the while . But what of the dreadful irony that all through this time in hell , right to the irrelevant end , the protagonist has not known that he was damned ? This seems quite consonant with the picture of ...
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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Otras ediciones - Ver todas
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