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 108
... verse ? " . To put it differently , what are the objective elements in a line of verse which serve as triggers for the reader's judgements , and what are the unconscious principles of interpreting these triggers ? In this article , I ...
... verse ? " . To put it differently , what are the objective elements in a line of verse which serve as triggers for the reader's judgements , and what are the unconscious principles of interpreting these triggers ? In this article , I ...
Página 193
... verse would seem at first an unlikely pursuit for the men who wrote under the aegis of Empire , which may explain why virtually every account of the Anglo - Indian ethos of the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries ignores , or at ...
... verse would seem at first an unlikely pursuit for the men who wrote under the aegis of Empire , which may explain why virtually every account of the Anglo - Indian ethos of the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries ignores , or at ...
Página 214
... verse works hard to prevent precisely such a lapse into silence , its raison d'etre is , quite simply , phatic communion or " the exchange of words " . Only the natives are permitted the luxury of silence . Thus , Horace Hayman Wilson ...
... verse works hard to prevent precisely such a lapse into silence , its raison d'etre is , quite simply , phatic communion or " the exchange of words " . Only the natives are permitted the luxury of silence . Thus , Horace Hayman Wilson ...
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
analysis appears becomes begins believe British called characters clause concept concerned context Cowper created critical culture Dream effect elements English example existence experience expression fact fiction final function give given hand hearer human hymn imaginative important India individual initial interest interpretation Jack John Jones language less lines linguistic literary literature live London look meaning metaphor mind nature never novel offered once original parable perhaps person philosopher play poem poet position possible present provides question reader reading reference reflection relation seems seen segments semantic sense sentence signifier Singapore skunks sound speak speaker spirit stanza story structure suggests syllables symbolism syntactic syntax theme theory thought tradition truth turn understanding University utterance verse writing