Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 69
Pagina 17
Now it is impulses from Cranford which determine when and about what writing will be done , as writing becomes more and more implicated in its subject . Writing also sets limits on Cranford . By abandoning the unwritten past , which ...
Now it is impulses from Cranford which determine when and about what writing will be done , as writing becomes more and more implicated in its subject . Writing also sets limits on Cranford . By abandoning the unwritten past , which ...
Pagina 8
The subject becomes a function of the relation between signifiers . The insertion of the signified absence , which is the name - of - the - father , within the signifying chain is synonymous with what Lacan calls the castration of the ...
The subject becomes a function of the relation between signifiers . The insertion of the signified absence , which is the name - of - the - father , within the signifying chain is synonymous with what Lacan calls the castration of the ...
Pagina 27
For the narcissistic writer the mirror becomes the highest aesthetic idol , and a mirror likeness becomes the guarantee of artistic success . The consequent mirror symmetry of the doubles ( Felix is left - handed ) dictates the ...
For the narcissistic writer the mirror becomes the highest aesthetic idol , and a mirror likeness becomes the guarantee of artistic success . The consequent mirror symmetry of the doubles ( Felix is left - handed ) dictates the ...
Wat mensen zeggen - Een review schrijven
We hebben geen reviews gevonden op de gebruikelijke plaatsen.
Inhoudsopgave
Articles | 1 |
Myth and | 49 |
On Narrative Transitions in the Prologue | 74 |
Copyright | |
10 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
accept acts already analysis appears approach attempt becomes beginning CALIFORNIA calls castration chapter communication complex concept concerned context continues course Cranford created critics culture death deconstruction define describe desire discourse discussion elements essay evolution example existence expectations experience explain fact father fiction final foregrounding function genre German Hermann human idea ideology important interest interpretation kind language LIBRARY linguistic literary literature Marxism meaning metaphor method München narrative narrator nature novel object once opening Orientalism origin poem poetic possible practical pragmatics present Press principle problem progressive provides question reader reading reception reference relation result rhetoric Schreber seems semiotics sense sequence situation social story structure suggests takes tale textual theory tion tradition transformation understand Univ UNIVERSITY various Victor writing York