The Language of Puritan Feeling: An Exploration in Literature, Psychology, and Social HistoryRutgers University Press, 1980 - 346 páginas |
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Página 84
... forced to a nearer communion with God , because so many children as they bring forth , they are in peril of their lives . " 41 Although Sibbes couples anxiety and feelings in his reasons for being religious , his prose tames them , as ...
... forced to a nearer communion with God , because so many children as they bring forth , they are in peril of their lives . " 41 Although Sibbes couples anxiety and feelings in his reasons for being religious , his prose tames them , as ...
Página 105
... forced on Hamlet and Ophelia in the play , and more loving and confusing parental self - falsifications were visited on Puritan children . Conscious ambivalence toward oneself became an inward sign of more unconscious ambivalence toward ...
... forced on Hamlet and Ophelia in the play , and more loving and confusing parental self - falsifications were visited on Puritan children . Conscious ambivalence toward oneself became an inward sign of more unconscious ambivalence toward ...
Página 201
... forced fit of syllables . A delight in bringing un- likes together can be a great virtue in puns , as in first - generation similes . It can yoke worldliness to godliness . But not when meanings and feelings are reduced to cleverness ...
... forced fit of syllables . A delight in bringing un- likes together can be a great virtue in puns , as in first - generation similes . It can yoke worldliness to godliness . But not when meanings and feelings are reduced to cleverness ...
Conteúdo
CHAPTER | 5 |
Puritans Hate Stage Plays? 223 | 23 |
CHAPTER | 41 |
Direitos autorais | |
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Termos e frases comuns
1st pub ambivalence anal anger Anglican Anne Bradstreet antinomian anxiety authority Autobiography behavior Bible Boston breast child rearing childhood Christ church cited Compleat Body conflict conversion Cotton Mather death dependence discipline Dod and Cleaver dream early Edwards's Elizabethan emotional England especially expressed faith Family Romance fantasy fear feelings female Franklin Freud Freudian God's Godlye Form Gouge grace Greven guilt half-way covenant hath heart heaven holy husband Ibid imagery Increase Mather John Cotton Jonathan Edwards Josselin literature London Lord male mind ministers natural obedience Obsessional obsessive style Oliver Heywood Parable parents patriarchal pattern Perry Miller polarities preachers preaching Protestant Temperament psychoanalytic Puritan language religion religious repression rhetoric Richard Robert Cleaver role Sacvan Bercovitch saints Samuel Willard says seems sense sermon sexual similes sinful sinners social soul speaks spiritual stage superego tender mothering Thomas Hooker Thomas Shepard tion unconscious wife women Word worldly wrath York