The Bucknell ReviewBucknell University Press, 1961 |
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النتائج 1-3 من 75
الصفحة 187
... characters speaking " in character " is still so strong in France that the new novelists evade the full issue : Butor cushions the shock by identifying the Voice with a man writing ; Robbe - Grillet hides the owner of the Voice , as if ...
... characters speaking " in character " is still so strong in France that the new novelists evade the full issue : Butor cushions the shock by identifying the Voice with a man writing ; Robbe - Grillet hides the owner of the Voice , as if ...
الصفحة 354
... character will have acquired certain second natures as habits . They will react automatically to certain situational stimuli as a result of these habits , rather than out of choice , inclination , a feeling of rational responsibility ...
... character will have acquired certain second natures as habits . They will react automatically to certain situational stimuli as a result of these habits , rather than out of choice , inclination , a feeling of rational responsibility ...
الصفحة 75
... character to remain himself and yet to be many persons , names enable Faulkner to make out of one book many things . The reader circles round an event , a character , a tale , viewing through different perspectives the process of ...
... character to remain himself and yet to be many persons , names enable Faulkner to make out of one book many things . The reader circles round an event , a character , a tale , viewing through different perspectives the process of ...
المحتوى
ARTICLES | 1 |
December 1961 Number | 2 |
ALCESTE ORGON AND LE RIDICULE DE LA VERTU | 15 |
46 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
absolute presuppositions aesthetic Alceste Alceste's American artistic attitude becomes behavior BUCKNELL REVIEW Bucknell University Butor Célimène century character Christian classical Collingwood concept creative cultic action cultural death definition Dostoyevsky early medieval early Middle Ages Edwards Edwin Arlington Robinson Emily Dickinson emotional essay example existence existentialist expression fact Falstaff Faulkner feeling Franklin Freud Heidegger human Ibid ideal ideas implies individual indoctrination intellectuals interaction JOHN WHEATCROFT Leibniz Lighthouse Lily's literary logical meaning metaphysical Michel Butor mind modern Molière moral myth nature Nichols Nordau novel object Orgon perhaps person philosophical poem poet poetic poetry political possible practical criticism principle question R. P. Blackmur Ramsay Raskol Raskolnikov rational reality reason Richard Cory Russian seems sense Shylock significant situation social society Sonia Spengler spiritual stanza suggests Svidrigailov symbolic Tartuffe theory things thought tion tradition values Western words writing York