The Rhetoric Of Fiction |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 62
Pagina 32
21 The phrase "representative figures" in his subtitle, he tells us, refers to "figures
of speech, to the characteristic metaphors of the generation; as well as to the
human figures within the novels and to the figures of the writers themselves.
21 The phrase "representative figures" in his subtitle, he tells us, refers to "figures
of speech, to the characteristic metaphors of the generation; as well as to the
human figures within the novels and to the figures of the writers themselves.
Pagina 120
Wayne C. Booth. itself in so far as reality is made up of human content. "But an
object of art is artistic only in so far as it is not real" (p. 10) . "Even though pure art
may be impossible there doubtless can prevail a tendency toward a purification
of ...
Wayne C. Booth. itself in so far as reality is made up of human content. "But an
object of art is artistic only in so far as it is not real" (p. 10) . "Even though pure art
may be impossible there doubtless can prevail a tendency toward a purification
of ...
Pagina 295
You see, a person I knew used to divide human beings into three categories:
those who prefer having nothing to hide rather than being obliged to lie, those
who prefer lying to having nothing to hide, and finally those who like both lying
and the ...
You see, a person I knew used to divide human beings into three categories:
those who prefer having nothing to hide rather than being obliged to lie, those
who prefer lying to having nothing to hide, and finally those who like both lying
and the ...
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Sommario
True Novels Must Be Realistic | 23 |
All Authors Should Be Objective | 67 |
True Art Ignores the Audience | 89 |
Copyright | |
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Parole e frasi comuni
aesthetic ambiguity artistic Aspern Papers beliefs chap chapter character comedy comic commentary complete consciousness conventional critics distance dramatic E. M. Forster effect Emma Emma's emotional Essays example experience explicit F. O. Matthiessen fact Faulkner faults feel Flaubert Frank Churchill George Eliot heighten Henry James hero human impersonal implied author important inside views intellectual intensity interest intrusions irony James Joyce James's Jane Austen Joseph Conrad Joyce Joyce's judge judgment Kenyon Review kind Knightley literary literature London look matter means ment mind modern fiction moral narrative narrator's natural never norms novel novelist object omniscient person PMLA poetry Portrait precisely problem question R. P. Blackmur reader realism reality reflector reliable narrator rhetoric satire scene seems sense simply Stephen story sympathy technique tell thing tion trans Tristram Shandy true truth unreliable unreliable narrators values write York