English Institute EssaysColumbia University Press, 1957 |
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... language whose function is to express and evoke feelings , and which is therefore immune from the criteria of valid reference , as well as from the claims on our belief , appropriate to the language of science . The second theory ...
... language whose function is to express and evoke feelings , and which is therefore immune from the criteria of valid reference , as well as from the claims on our belief , appropriate to the language of science . The second theory ...
Página 110
... language of poetry does not convey any rhetorical propositions about the issues of religion or politics or psychology or science ; that is to say , it does not conduct the mind beyond itself to anything at all but rather leads us deeper ...
... language of poetry does not convey any rhetorical propositions about the issues of religion or politics or psychology or science ; that is to say , it does not conduct the mind beyond itself to anything at all but rather leads us deeper ...
Página 134
... language of the work . For the only thing that lies before the critic is a composition in language , and , after all , it is , pre- sumably , his skill in the supervision of language that primarily distinguishes the literary artist ...
... language of the work . For the only thing that lies before the critic is a composition in language , and , after all , it is , pre- sumably , his skill in the supervision of language that primarily distinguishes the literary artist ...
Conteúdo
Foreword | 1 |
Tradition and Experience | 31 |
Implications of an Organic Theory of Poetry | 53 |
Direitos autorais | |
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achieved actors aesthetic Allen Tate artist autonomy belief as faith belief as opinion character Christian Cleanth Brooks coherence communication concern contemporary context course creative culture Dante Dante's disbelief Divine Divine Comedy doctrine Donne's dramatic emotional essay ethical existence experience fact feel function human Hunter College I. A. Richards Ibid Ideas of Order imagination insists kind King Lear knowledge language Lear literary art Literature and Belief living London M. H. ABRAMS mask meaning meditation ment Milton mind moral Murray Krieger nature object person philosophical play poem poet poet's poetic truth poetry presents problem of belief Queens College question Ransom reader reality religion religious response Richards's role seems sense Shakespeare speak speaker statement Stevens Stevens's structure T. S. Eliot theory thing thou thought tion vision Vivas voice W. B. Yeats W. K. Wimsatt Wallace Stevens William words writer Yeats York Yvor Winters