The PreludeNigel Wood |
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Page 51
... figure which creates autobiography is in the ' alignment between the two subjects ' , the one who writes , and the one who is written about , each determin- ing the other in an endless and unresolvable play of difference and identity ...
... figure which creates autobiography is in the ' alignment between the two subjects ' , the one who writes , and the one who is written about , each determin- ing the other in an endless and unresolvable play of difference and identity ...
Page 52
... figures of deprivation , maimed men , drowned corpses , blind beggars ' , who are all ' figures of Wordsworth's own ... figure which he glosses as : the fiction of an apostrophe to an absent , deceased , or voiceless entity which posits ...
... figures of deprivation , maimed men , drowned corpses , blind beggars ' , who are all ' figures of Wordsworth's own ... figure which he glosses as : the fiction of an apostrophe to an absent , deceased , or voiceless entity which posits ...
Page 53
... figure taps a deep fear that the living and the dead may change places . Wordsworth's anxiety about the power of a rhetorical fiction is emphasized , according to de Man , by the poet's anger at the improper use of language . Words must ...
... figure taps a deep fear that the living and the dead may change places . Wordsworth's anxiety about the power of a rhetorical fiction is emphasized , according to de Man , by the poet's anger at the improper use of language . Words must ...
Contents
Paul de Man and Imaginative Consolation in The Prelude | 27 |
Topoanalysis and Subjectivity | 60 |
Foucault and the New History | 98 |
Copyright | |
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aesthetic answer argues attempt authority autobiography becomes begin body Book called claim close Coleridge concerned constructed context critical cultural described desire detail determined discipline discourse earlier effect English essay example existence experience fact feeling figure follows force Foucault function given gives horizon idea identify ideology imagination individual interest interpretation interrogative Jauss kind knowledge language less limits lines literary literature Man's material meaning mental mind mode narrative nature never object original particular passage past poem poet poetic poetry political position possibility practice Prelude present problem production professional question reader reading reality recent reference regarded relation rhetorical Romantic scene seems sense social space spatial structure textual theoretical theory things thought tion traditional trope truth turn understanding voice whole Wordsworth writing