Observations on Life, Literature, and Learning in AmericaSouthern Illinois University Press, 1961 - 253 Seiten |
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Seite 40
... practical minded . They want culture to help them live and to have some im- mediate relevance to life . They flock to the social sciences because those appear to them more practical and factual , and claim to be concerned only with the ...
... practical minded . They want culture to help them live and to have some im- mediate relevance to life . They flock to the social sciences because those appear to them more practical and factual , and claim to be concerned only with the ...
Seite 62
... practical and , since most of them were compatriots of Robinson Crusoe , their genius lay in the realm of the practical . The culture of the country therefore took on a line from which it has hardly swerved . Changing the world through ...
... practical and , since most of them were compatriots of Robinson Crusoe , their genius lay in the realm of the practical . The culture of the country therefore took on a line from which it has hardly swerved . Changing the world through ...
Seite 108
... practical . Deeds speak louder than words : the publication abroad of a few of our better books and periodicals would be worth an incalculable amount of Voice of America broadcasts averring that we are cultured . It should be ...
... practical . Deeds speak louder than words : the publication abroad of a few of our better books and periodicals would be worth an incalculable amount of Voice of America broadcasts averring that we are cultured . It should be ...
Inhalt
An Apology for Offering Advice to Americans | 3 |
The Emigré Scholar in America | 20 |
French and American Education | 69 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
abroad achievement Ameri American education American literature artists become better century civilization colleagues Comparative Literature complacency coun criticism culture D. H. Lawrence Dashiell Hammett decades democracy democratic develop disciplines E. M. Forster educa English enjoy Europe European Faulkner fear foreign languages France French German Gide gifted Goethe graduate guages Hart Crane human humanists I. A. Richards ideal ideas imagination influence intellectual intelligent knowledge lack land lately learned leisure less litera literary living mass media ment methods mind Modern Language naïve nations never novel novelists obsessed once past perhaps philosophy poetry poets political present prestige probably profession professors Proust psychology readers scholars scholarship seldom spirit Stendhal T. S. Eliot teachers teaching Théophile Gautier tion traditions ture United universities values W. H. Auden Western words writers Yale young youth