Perspectives by Incongruity, Volume 2Indiana University Press, 1964 - 200 pagina's |
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Pagina 20
... important with the important . If the artist's " revelations " are of tremendous importance to him , he will necessarily seek to ritualize them , to find a correspondingly important setting for them . But the ritualizing of a revelation ...
... important with the important . If the artist's " revelations " are of tremendous importance to him , he will necessarily seek to ritualize them , to find a correspondingly important setting for them . But the ritualizing of a revelation ...
Pagina 21
... important revelation in an important setting , what more natural than that he should select for his setting such ideas as are tradi- tionally considered important ? Eloquence thus comes to be allied with strict doctrines of inclusion ...
... important revelation in an important setting , what more natural than that he should select for his setting such ideas as are tradi- tionally considered important ? Eloquence thus comes to be allied with strict doctrines of inclusion ...
Pagina 59
... important of all : dis- sociation . McDougall finds it remarkable that , whereas au- thorities like Janet and Morton Prince regard dissociation as the most important and far - reaching explanatory principle to Secular Conversions 59.
... important of all : dis- sociation . McDougall finds it remarkable that , whereas au- thorities like Janet and Morton Prince regard dissociation as the most important and far - reaching explanatory principle to Secular Conversions 59.
Inhoudsopgave
The Excursion | 17 |
The Poetic Process | 34 |
From Preface to CounterStatement first edition | 50 |
Copyright | |
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altar analysis appeal Aristotle Arjk artist Aryan aspect attitude audience autoeroticism become burlesque Caesar Cassio character chiasmus Cinna consider conversion criticism Democritus Desdemona dialectical doctrine drama effect eloquence emotion esthetic eyes fact fall feel frame gashouse gang glory Hamlet Heaven Hence Hitler human I. A. Richards Iago Iago's idea ideal imagery imagine ingredients insofar instance interpretation Kenneth Burke kind literary living logic logological look magic matter Matthew Arnold means ment mind motives nature one's Othello pattern of experience perfect philosophy piety play plot poem poet poetic poetry possible principle psychology psychosis purely rational reader reference require ritual romanticism scene scientific sense Shakespeare situation social stanza Stendhal strategy stressing structure suggest symbolic theme things thou thought tion tragedy tragic transvaluation of values Treep truth turn Wawl whereby word writing