Journal of the Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association, Volumen11Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association., 1990 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 41
Página 1
... reader is repeatedly enjoined to believe the narration . Such a captatio benevolentiae the rhetorical convention inviting reader interest - typically takes the form of assertions , such as " I am telling nothing but the truth ...
... reader is repeatedly enjoined to believe the narration . Such a captatio benevolentiae the rhetorical convention inviting reader interest - typically takes the form of assertions , such as " I am telling nothing but the truth ...
Página 30
... reader . The work never quite achieves absolute order and harmony . Instead , Chaucer leaves the work in a state of suspension and the " rabble " inside the poem and the reader outside without any definitive answers . The Canterbury ...
... reader . The work never quite achieves absolute order and harmony . Instead , Chaucer leaves the work in a state of suspension and the " rabble " inside the poem and the reader outside without any definitive answers . The Canterbury ...
Página 56
... reader is to interpret the stories or what moral lessons the reader can and should derive from them . In the " conclusione dell'autore " Boccaccio indeed throws the entire responsibility of interpretation back on the reader and disavows ...
... reader is to interpret the stories or what moral lessons the reader can and should derive from them . In the " conclusione dell'autore " Boccaccio indeed throws the entire responsibility of interpretation back on the reader and disavows ...
Contenido
Chaucers Sense of an Ending | 19 |
Exemplarity and the Interpretive Frame | 49 |
The Similar Complementarity of Othello | 101 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Journal of the Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association, Volúmenes7-8 Vista de fragmentos - 1986 |
Términos y frases comunes
Andromeda Angelica Anne Boleyn Ariosto attempt Bakhtin Beck Bianca Boccaccio Boccaccio's Brigham Young University Cassio century Chaucer Christian chronotope classical closure concerning critics culture d'Arpino Dalgarno Decameron Desdemona Desdemona and Othello's devisants discourse discussion El Paso Elizabethan Emilia England English essay ethical evidence example exemplary frame-narrative French Girolamo da Carpi grammar Henry Heptaméron hippogriff human humanist Iago Iago's Ibid iconographic interpretation Italian John Jonson JRMMRA king language planners Latin learning letters literary literature Lodowick Marco Polo Marguerite Marguerite de Navarre Marguerite's Medieval and Renaissance Middle Ages narrative narrator natural languages notions novella Oisille Othello painting Parliament of Fowls Paso panel Perseus philosophical language play pluralistic vision poem poetry Polo's problems prologue radical reader Reformation religious rhetoric Royal Ruggiero Salomon's scholars Shakespeare Society sources story textual things tion tradition Tragedy Travels universal character University Press volume Warnicke wife Wilkins Wilkins's words writing