Dickens's Fiction: Tapestries of ConscienceBritish writer Dickens (1812-70) extensively used such reiterative techniques as repetition, paradox, and multiple perspectives to increase the complexity and appeal of his fiction, says Friedman (English, City U. of New York-Queens College). He looks in detail at examples in eight works written at |
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الصفحة 14
In " The ' Uncanny ' " ( 1919 ) Freud regards the compulsion to repeat as " instinctual " ( 17 : 238 ) ; in Beyond ... The double has been regarded as signifying a wish for immortality , a fear of mortality , and a desire for incest ( a ...
In " The ' Uncanny ' " ( 1919 ) Freud regards the compulsion to repeat as " instinctual " ( 17 : 238 ) ; in Beyond ... The double has been regarded as signifying a wish for immortality , a fear of mortality , and a desire for incest ( a ...
الصفحة 35
Certainly , the father's forbidding a son to espouse a woman of his own choice and / or ordering an undesired marriage may be regarded as a version of the Oedipal conflict . Anny Sadrin , in a study that sees " the interrelation of ...
Certainly , the father's forbidding a son to espouse a woman of his own choice and / or ordering an undesired marriage may be regarded as a version of the Oedipal conflict . Anny Sadrin , in a study that sees " the interrelation of ...
الصفحة 91
But just as Fagin is regarded as an outsider because he is a Jew and an outlaw , so Tulkinghorn is described by the anonymous narrator as " dwelling among mankind but not consorting with them " ( 42 : 514 ) .
But just as Fagin is regarded as an outsider because he is a Jew and an outlaw , so Tulkinghorn is described by the anonymous narrator as " dwelling among mankind but not consorting with them " ( 42 : 514 ) .
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المحتوى
Primal Secrets | 19 |
Paradox Puzzle Exemplum | 59 |
Echoes and Reflections in Bleak House | 77 |
حقوق النشر | |
6 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
accept Agnes appears asks assistance become believe Bella Bleak House Boffin Brownlow calls cause Chapter characters child Christmas considered course daughter David death describes desire despite Dickens Dickens's earlier early edition Estella Esther Eugene expression Fagin father feeling fiction figure Fledgeby Friend Ghost given gives Harmon important includes installment interest involved Jenny John kind Lady later leads letter linked lives Lizzie London looks Louisa marriage marry meeting mentioned moral Moreover mother narrative narrator never Nicholas Nickleby notes noticed novel observes offers Oliver Twist Oliver's parents perhaps person perspectives play possible present previously protagonist provides readers refers regarded remain remarks resemblance response reveals Riah Rose Scrooge seeks seems seen sense significant sister Smike Spirit Stephen story subsequently suggests surrogate tale tells tion wife woman young