The Centennial Review: CR., 20. kötetCollege of Arts and Letters, Michigan State University, 1976 |
Részletek a könyvből
1 - 3 találat összesen 39 találatból.
71. oldal
... language they share . Nothing is more central to the nature of both myth and literature than the capacity of symbolic language to construct the world in which we live . Edmund Leach has described this phenomenon , by which a child ...
... language they share . Nothing is more central to the nature of both myth and literature than the capacity of symbolic language to construct the world in which we live . Edmund Leach has described this phenomenon , by which a child ...
188. oldal
... language itself has become conscious of its negativity . The modern theater dramatizes the tragedy , the awful luxation between the self's negativism and a language aware of its nothingess . Language is the non - I , that we do not know ...
... language itself has become conscious of its negativity . The modern theater dramatizes the tragedy , the awful luxation between the self's negativism and a language aware of its nothingess . Language is the non - I , that we do not know ...
280. oldal
... language in this scheme ? Language was to be a tool in the search for the ideal ; its role was to record the quest itself , the obstacles , the frustrations , and often the failures of the poet , and also , to capture the occasional ...
... language in this scheme ? Language was to be a tool in the search for the ideal ; its role was to record the quest itself , the obstacles , the frustrations , and often the failures of the poet , and also , to capture the occasional ...
Tartalomjegyzék
ALBERT GOLDBARTH | 53 |
Repudiation and Reality Instruction in Saul Bellows Fiction | 75 |
NUMBER | 101 |
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achieved action American André Malraux Ara Coeli artists attitude Augie Augie March autarky become Bellow Billy Pilgrim Bloom boar body Centennial Review century character Chartres China Chinese Church Civil consciousness criticism culture death Dickens dream Dresden economic Eliot example existence experience feel fiction final Flaubert forces foreign Franco Freud Garnet German Greek Henderson Henry Adams Herzog human Ibid important individual Joyce Joyce's language literary literature living London Malraux man's means Michigan State University mind modern moral myth nature negation never Nietzsche novel past Paul Valéry perspective poet poetry political possible pre-tragic prose poem psychological reader reality Revolution role Sammler Sammler's Planet seems sense sexual Slaughterhouse-Five Smallweed social society Spain Spanish speaker spirit Surrealists symbolic things tion Tiresias traditional tragedy tragic hero Tralfamadore Tralfamadorian unconscious Valéry Valéry's Venus and Adonis vision Vonnegut Whitman York