The Rhetoric of Criticism: From Hobbes to ColeridgePergamon Press, 1984 - 127 Seiten |
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... language . To reduce the power of language to the mechanical level of the use of tropes , figures and metaphors is to distort its very nature . When a technique is applied mechanically it becomes an obstacle to further development and ...
... language . To reduce the power of language to the mechanical level of the use of tropes , figures and metaphors is to distort its very nature . When a technique is applied mechanically it becomes an obstacle to further development and ...
Seite 43
... language , but should look through the language at the objects and persons presented . Different writers achieve this ideal in different degrees . No one would claim , for instance , that in the case of modern writers like James Joyce ...
... language , but should look through the language at the objects and persons presented . Different writers achieve this ideal in different degrees . No one would claim , for instance , that in the case of modern writers like James Joyce ...
Seite 113
... languages " , Coleridge enlarges on the characteristics of the English language : But in English I find that which is possessed by no other modern language , and which , as it were , appropriates it to the drama . It is a language made ...
... languages " , Coleridge enlarges on the characteristics of the English language : But in English I find that which is possessed by no other modern language , and which , as it were , appropriates it to the drama . It is a language made ...
Inhalt
Hobbess Rhetorical Criticism | 3 |
The Rhetorical Approach in Dryden | 31 |
Humes Of the Standard of Taste | 51 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
aesthetic analysis Answer to Davenant Aristotle beauty Biographia called characters Coleridge Coleridge's concepts Consequences critical essays David Hume definition diction drama Dryden English criticism epic poem epic poetry expression fact fancy and imagination feeling Gilbert Ryle Gondibert hero heroic poem Hobbes's human nature Hume Hume's images imitation of nature important interest invention James Joyce John Dryden Johnson judgement kind language of poetry linguistic literary criticism literature logic London meaning metaphors Milton mind modern commentators moral neoclassical objects observation organic unity painting passage passions philosopher play poet's poetic language Preface to Homer principles qualities Quintilian reader reason refer regarded rhetoric Romantic says sense sentiment Shakespeare speech Standard of Taste style synonymy T. S. Eliot theory things Thomas Hobbes Thorpe thought tragicomedy translation true truth unity of action untranslatability Venus and Adonis Virgil virtue whole words Wordsworth's