Literary Value/cultural Power: Verbal Arts in the Twenty-first CenturySo many of us use words in ways we want others to value. We write letters, emails and poems. We tell stories to our children or our friends. Human beings have done this as far back as history can record, and the verbal arts are an intrinsic part of all societies. Indeed, they have become a defining element in national cultures. Today we have education systems, the commercial arena of publishing and bookselling, and increasingly the world of electronic media, all laying claim to the knowledge of literary value in the name of cultural power. At the same time more and more of us are writing, reading, speaking and listening, and making up different communities that value the verbal arts in ways rewarding to ourselves. As the separation between what used to be called 'high art' and 'popular culture' dissolves, there is a real problem for many of us in deciding what to read, or to whom we want to listen. |
Részletek a könyvből
1 - 3 találat összesen 29 találatból.
17. oldal
Moreover , writing from the Englishspeaking places outside of England has had
difficulty being recognised and valued ... English language in ways that are
specific to other cultures , although an increasing number of writers in England
also fit ...
Moreover , writing from the Englishspeaking places outside of England has had
difficulty being recognised and valued ... English language in ways that are
specific to other cultures , although an increasing number of writers in England
also fit ...
39. oldal
Many contemporary African writers , and writers from England , the Caribbean
and the Americas , have turned to the use of folk - tale . In an essay on Amos
Tutuola's My Life in the Bush of Ghosts ( 1954 ) , Ato Quayson comments that the
novel ...
Many contemporary African writers , and writers from England , the Caribbean
and the Americas , have turned to the use of folk - tale . In an essay on Amos
Tutuola's My Life in the Bush of Ghosts ( 1954 ) , Ato Quayson comments that the
novel ...
128. oldal
They tried New Zealand , but the society was so different to that of England , that
she persuaded her husband to join the RAF , and they were almost immediately
posted to what was then Southern Rhodesia . In Bulawayo they lived on the ...
They tried New Zealand , but the society was so different to that of England , that
she persuaded her husband to join the RAF , and they were almost immediately
posted to what was then Southern Rhodesia . In Bulawayo they lived on the ...
Mit mondanak mások - Írjon ismertetőt
Nem találtunk ismertetőket a szokott helyeken.
Tartalomjegyzék
chapter two | 15 |
chapter three | 33 |
chapter four | 49 |
Copyright | |
6 további fejezet nem látható
Más kiadások - Összes megtekintése
Literary Value/ Cultural Power: Verbal Arts in the Twenty-First Century Lynette Hunter Korlátozott előnézet - 2001 |
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
aesthetics allow approaches argues artist arts audience become begin bring called canon century challenge chapter character child comes communities concerned conventions copies critical cultural developed difficult discussion early effect electronic engage England English example experience fact feel genre gives hypertext idea important individual interesting issues kind knowledge language letters listen literary value literature lives look meaning mother move never Ngugi wa Thiong'o novel offers oral person play poetry political possible present problem produced publishing question reader recent recognise relationship represent representations response rhetoric sense short simply situated social society speaking specific story structure suggest talk tell texts things tion told traditional turn understand universal verbal voice woman women writing written