CEA Critic, Volume 55Department of English, Texas A & M University, 1992 |
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Página 63
... facts " of natural history be used as points of departure for an examination of “ higher truths . " For Burroughs , the philosophical fact was not necessarily “ higher ” than the natural one , and certainly not by definition . Thoreau ...
... facts " of natural history be used as points of departure for an examination of “ higher truths . " For Burroughs , the philosophical fact was not necessarily “ higher ” than the natural one , and certainly not by definition . Thoreau ...
Página 66
... fact which can become the distinct and uninvited subject of our thought , the actual glory of the universe ; the only fact which a human being cannot avoid recognizing .... ( 140 ) But what Burroughs comes to accept in his critical ...
... fact which can become the distinct and uninvited subject of our thought , the actual glory of the universe ; the only fact which a human being cannot avoid recognizing .... ( 140 ) But what Burroughs comes to accept in his critical ...
Página 90
... fact , says the author through his character William , the absence of reality is central to the process of signification . In yet another discussion of signs , William and Adso talk about words in books - in particular , about ...
... fact , says the author through his character William , the absence of reality is central to the process of signification . In yet another discussion of signs , William and Adso talk about words in books - in particular , about ...
Conteúdo
A Special Issue of the CEA Critic | 1 |
Ethnicity Class and Culture | 26 |
Autobiographical Revisioning | 39 |
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Abbey Abbey's aesthetic American literature audience become Burroughs Burroughs's canon CEA CRITIC century characters College English Association consciousness contemporary context culture D. H. Lawrence Deep Ecology Desert Solitaire dialogic discussion edition editors Edward Abbey Elinor and Marianne essay Fanny female fiction Folio George Grove Hayduke Heath Hellman Henry Hopi human ideas ideology issues Jane Austen Jeffers Jeffers's John Journal King Lear Laguna language Lawrence Lear Lear's literary lives male marriage means metaphor modern Monkey Wrench Gang narrative narrator Native American Native American literature natural world novel perspective play poem poetry political published Quarto readers reading Review revision role Rosset Sarah says scene Sense and Sensibility Shakespeare Silko social society song story Storyteller structure suggests teaching theory thing thinking Thoreau tion traditional truth University veil vision Walden William Winesburg woman words writing York Youngstown Youngstown State University