Toward a Definition of Topos: Approaches to Analogical ReasoningLynette Hunter Macmillan, 1991 - 231 Seiten The word 'topos' means place, either physical, natural, logical or rhetorical. This collections of essays covers a wide range of mostly English literature from Chaucer and Spenser, via Fielding, to Joyce, with one or two incursions into French writing, in the form of essays on Montaigne and Verne, seeking to apply a rhetorical understanding of 'topos' or commonplaces to the criticism of literature. -- Book jacket. |
Im Buch
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Seite 116
... characters . Whereas he had previously avoided the precise evocation of place very assiduously , Shakespeare now makes his language work exceptionally hard at suggesting the experience of a particular location : Gloucester Edgar ...
... characters . Whereas he had previously avoided the precise evocation of place very assiduously , Shakespeare now makes his language work exceptionally hard at suggesting the experience of a particular location : Gloucester Edgar ...
Seite 165
... characters has lived . The story Verne is beginning to construct is , in other words , conceived as an investigation into the extent to which the particular case of the four characters is governed by the ' law ' that ' all's bad that ...
... characters has lived . The story Verne is beginning to construct is , in other words , conceived as an investigation into the extent to which the particular case of the four characters is governed by the ' law ' that ' all's bad that ...
Seite 188
... characters who do not meet during the course of the events that Ulysses narrates but who possess intertwined fates that will be textually figured by the advertising rhyme . Poor Patrick Dignam could not , of course , meet with any of ...
... characters who do not meet during the course of the events that Ulysses narrates but who possess intertwined fates that will be textually figured by the advertising rhyme . Poor Patrick Dignam could not , of course , meet with any of ...
Inhalt
Rhetoric Landscape | 17 |
Problems with Imagery in Macbeth | 45 |
The Word Commonplaces in Montaigne | 66 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Towards A Definition of Topos: Approaches to Analogical Reasoning Lynette Hunter Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1991 |
Towards A Definition of Topos: Approaches to Analogical Reasoning Lynette Hunter Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2014 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
allegory annotations archetype argument audience authority becomes Bloom Bomarzo Bower of Bliss C.S. Lewis Chaucer Clarissa cliché commonplace and cliché commonplace-book Cordelia dialectics Don Quixote Edgar Edmond ellipticalisation English essay example father fiction Finnegans Wake Fool function genre Gloucester Goneril ideological imagery Italianate garden Joseph Andrews Joyce Joyce's writing Kenilworth Kent King Lear language Lear's Leir literary literature locus amoenus logic London Macbeth McLuhan medieval metaphor metonymy mode monplace Montaigne moral narrative Nonsuch Nonsuch Palace novel passage person and act philosophical potted meat probe question quotation quoted reader reading reasoning recognise Renaissance rhetoric rhetoricians romance scene sense sentence Shakespeare signifying play social context speech Spenser structure suggests synecdoche textual things thou tion Tom Jones topics topoi topos traditional Tristram Shandy truth Ulysses valid Verne Villa Villa Lante visual Wake Wake's words