CEA Critic, Volume 57Department of English, Texas A & M University, 1994 |
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Página 77
... desire in The Well - Beloved , it is necessary first to look at several important theories of desire and their relationship to the nineteenth - century novel . In his famous analysis of desire and the novel , René Girard argues that desire ...
... desire in The Well - Beloved , it is necessary first to look at several important theories of desire and their relationship to the nineteenth - century novel . In his famous analysis of desire and the novel , René Girard argues that desire ...
Página 82
... Desire becomes triangular , but in a reversal of Girard's " medi- ated desire " the subject does not imitate the third figure's desire . The third figure , here the father , does not produce the subject's desire but rather prohibits it ...
... Desire becomes triangular , but in a reversal of Girard's " medi- ated desire " the subject does not imitate the third figure's desire . The third figure , here the father , does not produce the subject's desire but rather prohibits it ...
Página 84
... desire outside the domain of sanctioned tradition . But if Pierston's desire loses the aura of tradition , it gains , perhaps , the freedom of a democratized desire . Pierston may be a figure of male desire as subversive in the 1890s as ...
... desire outside the domain of sanctioned tradition . But if Pierston's desire loses the aura of tradition , it gains , perhaps , the freedom of a democratized desire . Pierston may be a figure of male desire as subversive in the 1890s as ...
Conteúdo
REEVALUATING THE BOUNDARIES | 1 |
Who Speaks for Autobiography? | 9 |
The Oral Autobiography | 20 |
Direitos autorais | |
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action American argue arguments attempt authority autobiography Baldwin become begins called Christine College course create critical cultural David death desire discussion Douglass early effect England English essay evidence example experience fact father feel fiction figure final Giovanni's human idea identity images imagination important individual influence interest issues James John kind language later learning literary literature lives look means memory mind moved narrative nature never notes novel once phallogocentric play poem political possible practice present question readers reading relation relationship response rhetoric role seems sense slave social speak story suggests teaching tell theory things thought traditional true truth trying understand University Utopia voice Willy woman women writing written York