Word & Confinement: Subjectivity in "classical" Discourse |
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Page 35
... remains uresolved . Macbeth hardly does anything he would like to do , and becoming the usurper he acts against nature which predicts both his rise and fall . Human agency in the matters of the world is thus indicated and silenced at ...
... remains uresolved . Macbeth hardly does anything he would like to do , and becoming the usurper he acts against nature which predicts both his rise and fall . Human agency in the matters of the world is thus indicated and silenced at ...
Page 48
... remain invisible , and , ideally , nonexistent . If a bad book happens to be published it goes " to the spunge " of the index and is preferably turned into nothingness in the purgatory of fire . The whole ritual of public execution and ...
... remain invisible , and , ideally , nonexistent . If a bad book happens to be published it goes " to the spunge " of the index and is preferably turned into nothingness in the purgatory of fire . The whole ritual of public execution and ...
Page 91
... remain outside the text in which only ideas are possible and hence it is necessary for Hume to withdraw from what he wrote ( the Treatise was published anonymously ) in order to " detextualize " the idea of an impression , to objectify ...
... remain outside the text in which only ideas are possible and hence it is necessary for Hume to withdraw from what he wrote ( the Treatise was published anonymously ) in order to " detextualize " the idea of an impression , to objectify ...
Common terms and phrases
absolute actually already ambiguous Areopagitica autobiography becomes Blaydes body Byrd called carnival censor censorship Christopher Smart Classical Age coffee-house confession constitutive creature Crusoe's death deconstruction Defoe Derrida Descartes desire discourse Dunciad eighteenth century Fanny Hill fiction Friday garden gesture Gulliver horn Houyhnhnms human Ibid idea identity individual inscribed invisible J.J. Rousseau Jacques Derrida Jubilate Agno king language literary literature London look Lord Lucrece Lucrece's madness matter means metonymies Michel Foucault Milton misanthropy monarch natural object obviously one's paradoxically philosophy poem poetry political Pope's Portia possible Post-Structuralism prayer present proper name Quoted reason regulated renders rhetoric Robinson Crusoe says Foucault seems sense Shakespeare signifier simply simultaneously society Song to David sort space speak sphere Stallybrass and White story Swift T.S. Eliot talks Tarquin Terry Eagleton theory thinkable transgression truth unthinkable visible voice whole William Shakespeare woman writing written wrote