The Rhetoric Of Fiction |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 81
Pagina 90
2 In the last few decades it is really only in handbooks about how to write best
sellers that we find very much open advice to the author to think of his reader and
write accordingly. The predominant fashion among serious writers has been to ...
2 In the last few decades it is really only in handbooks about how to write best
sellers that we find very much open advice to the author to think of his reader and
write accordingly. The predominant fashion among serious writers has been to ...
Pagina 91
pected to tolerate the attitudes of earlier novelists like Trollope, who claimed that
the novelist's first duty is to "make himself pleasant," and that to do so he must
render his meaning "without an effort to the reader."5 Why should the author be ...
pected to tolerate the attitudes of earlier novelists like Trollope, who claimed that
the novelist's first duty is to "make himself pleasant," and that to do so he must
render his meaning "without an effort to the reader."5 Why should the author be ...
Pagina 138
reader and the often very different self who goes about paying bills, repairing
leaky faucets, and failing in generosity and wisdom. It is only as I read that I
become the self whose beliefs must coincide with the author's. Regardless of my
real ...
reader and the often very different self who goes about paying bills, repairing
leaky faucets, and failing in generosity and wisdom. It is only as I read that I
become the self whose beliefs must coincide with the author's. Regardless of my
real ...
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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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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