Critical Approaches to LiteraturePrentice-Hall, 1956 - 404 من الصفحات Study of the methods, functions, and values of literary criticism, from the beginnings to the present day. |
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الصفحة 38
... literary criti- cism is on another level . Two new notions are involved . First , there is the notion that a historical falsehood may be an ideal truth , that a " probable impossibility " may reflect a more profound reality than an ...
... literary criti- cism is on another level . Two new notions are involved . First , there is the notion that a historical falsehood may be an ideal truth , that a " probable impossibility " may reflect a more profound reality than an ...
الصفحة 175
... literary activity . Once one is there , there is no limit to the number of questions that can be asked . Not only " How good is this work and why ? " and " How do we differentiate between the good and the less good ? " are the subjects ...
... literary activity . Once one is there , there is no limit to the number of questions that can be asked . Not only " How good is this work and why ? " and " How do we differentiate between the good and the less good ? " are the subjects ...
الصفحة 362
... literary value The answer to the second question posed above - can we transfer value judgments about kinds of society to the literary works produced by those kinds of society ? -must thus be a tentative negative . We cer- tainly cannot ...
... literary value The answer to the second question posed above - can we transfer value judgments about kinds of society to the literary works produced by those kinds of society ? -must thus be a tentative negative . We cer- tainly cannot ...
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achieve action argument Aristotle Aristotle's beauty Ben Jonson century characters Chaucer Cleanth Brooks Coleridge comedy concerned consider delight developed discussion Dr Johnson drama Dryden effect Eliot Elizabethan emotion English epic poetry essay example F. R. Leavis fact Faery Queen fiction function give Greek human nature I. A. Richards ideal ideas imaginative literature imitation interest knowledge language Lisideius literary criticism lively meaning Measure for Measure metaphysical poets method mind modern critics moral nature and value never novel object passions perfection persons philosophical Plato play pleasure plot poem poet poet's poetic Pope practical criticism present produced prose psychological qualities question reader relation represent Richards scene sense Shakespeare Sidney Sidney's Silent Woman social story Swinburne T. S. Eliot theory things thought tion tragedy true truth unity value of poetry verse whole words Wordsworth writer