Visits to Bedlam: Madness and Literature in the Eighteenth CenturyUniversity of South Carolina Press, 1974 - 200 Seiten |
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Seite 143
... reality was transient . " 50 Subtly the emotional and intellectual realities grow more important than prosaic Lockean reality ; the reality of words may even be set above other realities . It is the idea of some other reality that we ...
... reality was transient . " 50 Subtly the emotional and intellectual realities grow more important than prosaic Lockean reality ; the reality of words may even be set above other realities . It is the idea of some other reality that we ...
Seite 144
... reality : Rasselas is succeeded by Kubla Khan . Neoclassic literature uses metaphor mainly to enrich or encrust an objective subject . But the new language emerging at mid - century enables metaphor to identify ( that is , give an ...
... reality : Rasselas is succeeded by Kubla Khan . Neoclassic literature uses metaphor mainly to enrich or encrust an objective subject . But the new language emerging at mid - century enables metaphor to identify ( that is , give an ...
Seite 191
... reality is empirical and primary ; complex ideas depend for their reality on their consistency with what is possible in existence . Language does not appear to have the power to achieve reality independently . 58. Burke , Philosophical ...
... reality is empirical and primary ; complex ideas depend for their reality on their consistency with what is possible in existence . Language does not appear to have the power to achieve reality independently . 58. Burke , Philosophical ...
Inhalt
CHAPTER TWO The Dunciad and Augustan Madness | 12 |
CHAPTER THREE Swift | 58 |
CHAPTER FOUR Johnson | 88 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Alexander Cruden animals attack Augustan Age become Bedlam beginning Bertrand Bronson Blake Blake's blindness Book Boswell Burke calls chains chapter Cheyne Cowper danger darkness Defoe describe disease disorder distemper divine dreams Dulness Dunces Dunciad earlier early eighteenth century eighteenth century England English Malady enthusiast Essay example excrement fear feel folly Fool forces Foucault genius Gothic novels Gulliver's Gulliver's Travels Houyhnhnms Ibid ideas imagination Imlac insanity inspiration intellectual irrationality Johnson Jonathan Swift kind King Lear Lear's madness light literary literature Locke lunatic madhouses madman Madness and Civilization means melancholy metaphor mid-century moral nature Ned Ward never passion poem poet Poetical poetry Pope and Swift Pope's poverty private madhouses Rambler Rasselas reality reason religious remarks Renaissance Richardson Romantic Samuel Johnson Sancroft sane sanity satire satirist says scene seems sense speaks spirit Spleen Sublime Tale things thought truth Vapours victims vision William writes