Critical Theory Since PlatoHazard Adams Harcourt Brace Jovanovich College Publishers, 1992 - 1271 Seiten This outstanding anthology traces major critical statements from classic theorists like Plato to the contemporary. This standard historical textbook in the field focuses on important individual thinkers, and not particular schools of thought or isms. Current selections bring the anthology into contemporary times and show students how critical theory has evolved and progressed over time. |
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Seite 178
... pleasure to this end . It may be that pleasure directed to usefulness is the end of poetry . That is why we read in Isocrates's second oration13 that the ancient poets left instructions for life , as a result of which men became better ...
... pleasure to this end . It may be that pleasure directed to usefulness is the end of poetry . That is why we read in Isocrates's second oration13 that the ancient poets left instructions for life , as a result of which men became better ...
Seite 287
... pleasure , we have before considered . For this reason therefore , the description of a dunghill is pleasing to the imagination , if the image be represented to our minds by suitable expressions ; though , perhaps , this may be more ...
... pleasure , we have before considered . For this reason therefore , the description of a dunghill is pleasing to the imagination , if the image be represented to our minds by suitable expressions ; though , perhaps , this may be more ...
Seite 442
... pleasure to a human being possessed of that information which may be expected from him , not as a lawyer , a physician , a mariner , an astronomer , or a natural philosopher , but as a man . Except this one restriction , there is no ...
... pleasure to a human being possessed of that information which may be expected from him , not as a lawyer , a physician , a mariner , an astronomer , or a natural philosopher , but as a man . Except this one restriction , there is no ...
Inhalt
Introduction | 1 |
from Cratylus | 38 |
18 | 54 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action actor Adeimantus admiration Aeneid aesthetic allegory ancient appears Aristotle artist beauty Ben Jonson better called character comedy concept considered Cratylus critics delight Demosthenes discourse divine epic epic poetry Euripides excellent expression fable faculty feeling genius Geoffrey Keynes give gods Greek hath Hermogenes Hesiod Homer Horace human ideas Iliad imagination imitation judge judgment of taste kind knowledge language learned less manner matter means mind moral names nation nature never object observed opinion painter painting particular passion perfect person philosopher Plato play pleasure plot Plotinus poem poesy poet poetic poetry principle produce prose reason relation representation rhyme rules sense signify Socrates Sophocles sort soul speak species spirit sublime theory things thought Three Unities tion tragedy true truth understanding unity verse Virgil virtue whole William Blake words writing Zeus