Theory of Criticism |
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Page 4
... matter of textural explication . He suggests , in effect , that the poems cannot be interpreted without undergoing a special reorientation of understanding.10 In practice , this seems to mean considering verbal effects out of thematic ...
... matter of textural explication . He suggests , in effect , that the poems cannot be interpreted without undergoing a special reorientation of understanding.10 In practice , this seems to mean considering verbal effects out of thematic ...
Page 8
... matter ; but , in order to make this con- cession , we should have to consider what that subject - matter is . In other words , the poem demands a more thematic consideration than that given by Blackmur : the personal response , in his ...
... matter ; but , in order to make this con- cession , we should have to consider what that subject - matter is . In other words , the poem demands a more thematic consideration than that given by Blackmur : the personal response , in his ...
Page 147
... matter of the decay of religion : critics had not yet seen the necessity of allowing the work of literature to create its own ethic . That it was not an artistic matter solely is shown by the really startling revival of interest in the ...
... matter of the decay of religion : critics had not yet seen the necessity of allowing the work of literature to create its own ethic . That it was not an artistic matter solely is shown by the really startling revival of interest in the ...
Contents
The Appreciation of Minor Art | 15 |
The Concept of Availability | 31 |
Misreadable Poems and Misread Poems | 50 |
Copyright | |
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action aesthetic attempt attitude Bateson Blackmur Blake Boffin Bradley certainly character communication context Cordelia D. H. Lawrence Daiches death Dickens discussion divergence dramatic E. M. W. Tillyard effect Eliot Empson example experience F. R. Leavis F. W. Bateson fact Farrelly favour feeling garden Gatsby HOBSBAUM Holy Word Ibid idea individual instance interpretation John King Lear Knight language Lawrence Lawrence's Lear's lines linguistic literary literature LUCIE-SMITH matter meaning Milton misreadable poem Moby-Dick moral Muir Mutual Friend nature novel Paradise Lost passage phrase play poet poetic poetry possible Professor Tuve prose Psychol question Rainbow reader reading realise recognised reconciled REDGROVE Review scene Scott Fitzgerald seems sense Shakespeare Shelley simile Sons and Lovers speech stanza suggest symbol T. S. Eliot theory thing Tillyard tion verse Waldock whole Wilson Winters writing Yvor Winters