CEA Critic, Volumes 48-49Department of English, Texas A&M University, 1985 |
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College English Association. Copperfield are confronted with appearances that belie reality , with characters and events that seem to be what they are not . Sometimes the dislocation between appearance and reality is quickly apparent to ...
College English Association. Copperfield are confronted with appearances that belie reality , with characters and events that seem to be what they are not . Sometimes the dislocation between appearance and reality is quickly apparent to ...
Página 93
... reality . He tends unconsciously to describe an event in such a way because it actually happened that way , and from an artistic point of view , I can now see that this is wrong . ( pp . 19-20 ) Wolfe never confined himself to factual ...
... reality . He tends unconsciously to describe an event in such a way because it actually happened that way , and from an artistic point of view , I can now see that this is wrong . ( pp . 19-20 ) Wolfe never confined himself to factual ...
Página 174
... reality itself means " that no situation has any objective reality : it only existed in the minds of those who happened to be in on it at any specific moment . " The Stencils choose their lifelong quest for V knowing that she is unreal ...
... reality itself means " that no situation has any objective reality : it only existed in the minds of those who happened to be in on it at any specific moment . " The Stencils choose their lifelong quest for V knowing that she is unreal ...
Conteúdo
CRITIC | 2 |
William E Cain Theory and Practice in Contemporary Criticism | 3 |
Patricia A Johnson The Speculative Character of Poetry | 18 |
Direitos autorais | |
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Aeschylus American appears becomes beginning Blake called characters Christian continues course criticism culture David death describes desire Dickens dream edition English essay example existence experience fact fall father feel fiction figure final force give Gospel hand Hardy human imagination interpretation Jesus John kind language later letters light lines literary literature live London look Lost marriage meaning Milton mind misogyny narrative nature never NOTES novel passage past perhaps play poem poet poetic poetry political possible present Press question reader reading reality reference rhetoric says scene seems sense social society song story suggests tells theory things thought tion tradition truth turn understanding University vision voice whole woman women writing York