The Rites of Identity: The Religious Naturalism and Cultural Criticism of Kenneth Burke and Ralph EllisonPrinceton University Press, 10/01/2009 - 224 من الصفحات The Rites of Identity argues that Kenneth Burke was the most deciding influence on Ralph Ellison's writings, that Burke and Ellison are firmly situated within the American tradition of religious naturalism, and that this tradition--properly understood as religious--offers a highly useful means for considering contemporary identity and mitigating religious conflict. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 35
... one's own intellectual, disciplinary, and institutional history will likely take one outside familiar disciplinary terrain, which, Ellison would be quick to remind us, was never as defined and delineated as it appears in retrospect. I ...
... one's scholarly work as “theology” or not determines whether one is placing oneself in the pious or the impious, “hostile to religion” category. But this is a bad use of the word theology. Identity and Symbolic Action • 7.
... one's life, which helps to make one feel at peace in the world, and which screens out the greatest amount of chaos. All human beings do this.”36 Throughout his works, Ellison aimed to show “how elevated styles of speech related to the ...
... one's past takes place in Ellison's short story “Flying Home.” In their restored continuities, both pieces lack what Bloom thinks to be the American difference, the drive to establish discontinuity. Clearly, Ellison is up to something ...
... one's past, but not without plenty of angst and resistance of the temptation to “kill off” those attachments by establishing a discontinuity. Ellison's identification with Emerson is overdetermined by his very name, Ralph Waldo Ellison ...
المحتوى
1 | |
9780691092492_3CH2 | 25 |
9780691092492_4CH3 | 57 |
9780691092492_5CH4 | 80 |
9780691092492_6CH5 | 99 |
9780691092492_7CH6 | 120 |
9780691092492_8CH7 | 139 |
9780691092492_9CH8 | 157 |
9780691092492_10NOT | 172 |
9780691092492_11BIB | 195 |
9780691092492_12IND | 199 |