Xavier University Studies, Volumen5Xavier University (New Orleans, La.), 1966 |
Dentro del libro
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Página 22
... speech ; the maiden speech before the Brotherhood ; and the funeral oration for Tod Clifton . Again , however , within this framework , the pattern of reversals is employed , literalized by the hero's shuttling mo- tion into and out of ...
... speech ; the maiden speech before the Brotherhood ; and the funeral oration for Tod Clifton . Again , however , within this framework , the pattern of reversals is employed , literalized by the hero's shuttling mo- tion into and out of ...
Página 160
... speech in conveying ideas from the actor to the audience must be examined . WHY is the actor a person who represents the words or actions of another ? To what end does he do this ? The words ( or , let us say , the speech ) of a ...
... speech in conveying ideas from the actor to the audience must be examined . WHY is the actor a person who represents the words or actions of another ? To what end does he do this ? The words ( or , let us say , the speech ) of a ...
Página 161
... Speech helps the actor to discover his character and reveals that character to the audience . Hobbes ascribes , then , to a very Neo - Classical concept of decorum - in which kings behave and speak as kings - and also to the concept of ...
... Speech helps the actor to discover his character and reveals that character to the audience . Hobbes ascribes , then , to a very Neo - Classical concept of decorum - in which kings behave and speak as kings - and also to the concept of ...
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Xavier University Studies, Volúmenes5-7 Xavier University (New Orleans, La.) Vista de fragmentos - 1966 |
Términos y frases comunes
action actor Alastor audience Bledsoe Bottinius Brauchitsch Browning Browning's Bryans Caponsacchi castle Christ church coup d'état court courtier death devil Donne Donne's Satyres dramatic theory dream Ellison's Eve of St fiction final Flannery O'Connor German Goerdeler Guido Halder Half-Rome Hassell hero Hesse Hesse's Hitler Hobbes hope human ideal imagination innocence Interviewer Jacques Thibault Jean Barois Josef K judgment Kafka Kordt L'Eté Lamia Les Thibault Leviathan Leviticus Lord Halifax man's Martin du Gard Mary ment metaphors Milton monologues moral nature Nazi Negro novel O'Connor offensive Old Yellow Book opposition palace peace person Ph.D pilgrim play poem poet Poet's poetic Pompilia Pope Prince Edward County protagonist reader reality romantic romantic love satire Satyre seems Shelley Shelley's sonnet Sonnet 23 soul speech spiritual statement Steppenwolf suggests Temple theme Thibault tion tone Trial Trott truth Ulrich von Hassell vision words writing XAVIER UNIVERSITY STUDIES