Critiques and Essays on Modern Fiction, 1920-1951, Representing the Achievement of Modern American and British CriticsJohn W. Aldridge Ronald Press Company, 1952 - 610 oldal |
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1 - 3 találat összesen 82 találatból.
294. oldal
... feeling about his material , and he had arrived at the point where he understood the advantage of realizing his ... feelings of an observer and yet hold the feelings within some determined limits . In earlier stories he had splashed what ...
... feeling about his material , and he had arrived at the point where he understood the advantage of realizing his ... feelings of an observer and yet hold the feelings within some determined limits . In earlier stories he had splashed what ...
323. oldal
... feeling is understood as an answer , a therapeutic , when it becomes a sort of critical tool and is conceived of as ... feeling and helplessness .... It realizes itself as feeling , sincerity , understanding , as connection and unity ...
... feeling is understood as an answer , a therapeutic , when it becomes a sort of critical tool and is conceived of as ... feeling and helplessness .... It realizes itself as feeling , sincerity , understanding , as connection and unity ...
330. oldal
... feeling rather than the reality of the impersonal ideal . Those who were too absorbed in their ideals struck him as unbearably false , and women are grateful to him for this feeling . A couple of years before his death he writes as ...
... feeling rather than the reality of the impersonal ideal . Those who were too absorbed in their ideals struck him as unbearably false , and women are grateful to him for this feeling . A couple of years before his death he writes as ...
Tartalomjegyzék
Introductory Comment | 3 |
PERCY LUBBOCK The Strategy of Point of View | 9 |
ALLEN TATE Techniques of Fiction | 31 |
Copyright | |
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achieve action Allen Tate American appears artist Badge of Courage become Boss's characters Conrad consciousness Crane criticism D. H. Lawrence Dalloway death dramatic dream Dreiser E. M. Forster Earwicker Emily Brontë emotion essay experience fact Farewell to Arms Faulkner feeling Finnegans Wake Fitzgerald Flaubert Hemingway Hemingway's Henry James hero human ideal ideas imagination irony Jack John Peale Bishop Joyce Joyce's kind Lawrence literary literature lives look meaning metaphors method mind Miss Welty's Modern Fiction moral narrative narrator naturalistic nature never Nora novel novelist passion Passos perhaps poetry point of view present prose reader reality Red Badge Robin scene seems sense sensibility social spirit Stephen Stephen Crane story Strether's style symbolic T. S. Eliot technique theme thing thought tion truth Ulysses Univ values Virginia Woolf vision whole William Faulkner Woolf words writing young