Stories of Reading: Subjectivity and Literary UnderstandingJohns Hopkins University Press, 1989 - 261 pagine |
Sommario
An End to Interpretation? | 3 |
Response Intention and Motives for Interpretation | 17 |
Wuthering Heights | 41 |
Copyright | |
11 sezioni non visualizzate
Parole e frasi comuni
adolescence adult Adventures in Wonderland Agnes Alice Alice's Adventures Arabella aspect associations attempt believe Bleak House Bleich's Brontë Carroll's Catherine chap chapter character child childhood claim conceptualized consciously constraints construct context critics David Bleich David Copperfield described Dickens Dickens's discussion Emily Emily Brontë emotional Esther Summerson extrinsic fact father feelings fictional goblins Grahame's Hardy Hardy's Heathcliff Higglety Pigglety Pop Hirsch Ida's individual intention interpretation Jane Austen Jude the Obscure Jude's Kenneth Grahame kind literary understanding literature MacDonald Mansfield Park Maurice Sendak meaning Miriam Mole mother motivated Mudrick narrative narrator novel objective one's particular perhaps phantasies poem possible problem psychological question reader reader-response criticism relation relationship response papers seems Sendak's sense sexual Sons and Lovers stories of reading Sue's suggests symbolic things tion unconscious University Press Victorian Willows Wind woman women writing Wuthering Heights