The CEA Critic, Volumes 52-53College English Association., 1989 |
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Página 93
... interest to seventeenth- century authors . The authoritarian aspects of Puritan utopias continued through Bellamy , though Barlow's exceedingly abstract vision of future glory paid no attention to the experiences of ordinary persons ...
... interest to seventeenth- century authors . The authoritarian aspects of Puritan utopias continued through Bellamy , though Barlow's exceedingly abstract vision of future glory paid no attention to the experiences of ordinary persons ...
Página 81
... interest in the momentary epiphany leads him toward an even more personal mysticism . In the next few years , he decreases his emphasis on the transcendental nature of the circle and loses interest in objective philosophical truths that ...
... interest in the momentary epiphany leads him toward an even more personal mysticism . In the next few years , he decreases his emphasis on the transcendental nature of the circle and loses interest in objective philosophical truths that ...
Página 40
... interests of present- ing her as a " good woman " -that is , as more or less silent and compliant , another version of Sleeping Beauty , as Harley Granville - Barker describes her ( 340 ) is the sexist equivalent of the bigoted muting ...
... interests of present- ing her as a " good woman " -that is , as more or less silent and compliant , another version of Sleeping Beauty , as Harley Granville - Barker describes her ( 340 ) is the sexist equivalent of the bigoted muting ...
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action American appears argues associated audience authority become begin calls cause characters College course create critical culture death describes desire discussion English essay example existence experience eyes fact fantasy feel female fiction final give Hamlet hand human idea imagination individual interpretation issue John kind knowledge language later less light literary literature lives look Marxism meaning mind moral narrator nature never Notes novel offered perhaps person play poem poet poetic poetry political position possible present problem provides question readers relation response Robert role Romantic says seems sense sexuality Shakespeare social society speak speaker story suggests symbolic teach teacher tell texts theory things thought tion traditional truth turn understanding University utopia values vision voice window woman women writing York