Meaning and Truth in the ArtsArchon Books, 1964 - 252 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 64
Pagina 173
... human life in the sense described . When we find some character or characteristic untrue to human nature , we consider it a serious flaw in the work . Hawthorne says some- where that the one principle which the literary artist must ...
... human life in the sense described . When we find some character or characteristic untrue to human nature , we consider it a serious flaw in the work . Hawthorne says some- where that the one principle which the literary artist must ...
Pagina 188
... human charac- terization or trees , etc. The latter must then be sacrificed , and the result is puzzling to those who go to the painting for familiar every - day human values ( of which human character is perhaps the easiest to grasp ) ...
... human charac- terization or trees , etc. The latter must then be sacrificed , and the result is puzzling to those who go to the painting for familiar every - day human values ( of which human character is perhaps the easiest to grasp ) ...
Pagina 206
... human nature from reading Dostoyevsky ; but what do we know from seeing Cézanne or hearing Mozart ? There are propositions about human nature which we may be able to assert after reading Dostoyevsky , which we never could in the other ...
... human nature from reading Dostoyevsky ; but what do we know from seeing Cézanne or hearing Mozart ? There are propositions about human nature which we may be able to assert after reading Dostoyevsky , which we never could in the other ...
Sommario
PRELIMINARY DISTINCTIONS | 3 |
In Painting | 38 |
PROPOSITIONAL TRUTH | 141 |
Copyright | |
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artist assertion baroque music beauty Beethoven Bell certainly Cézanne Chapter character Charles Mauron Clive Bell colors common composition convention critics described discussed distinction drama Eastman effect essence esthetic experience esthetic form esthetic surface evocation evoke example expression fact feeling George Santayana give Gurney Hanslick historical I. A. Richards Ibid imaginative imitate important irrelevant kind knowledge L. A. Reid language life-values listener literary literature Marc Chagall material matter Max Eastman meaning medium merely mind musical experiences natural symbol notion novel objects Odyssey painter painting particular perception person Philosophy plastic poem poet poetic poetry present Professor Greene program music propositions psychological pure question realism reality refer referential relevant represent representational Roger Fry Santayana sense significant form simply sounds speak statements subject-matter Sullivan T. E. Hulme term theme theory things tion true true-to truth usage vision visual words