Yearbook of Comparative Criticism, Volume 3Joseph Strelka |
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Page 232
... basis is too narrow to afford results valid for the entire epoch . In contrast , Eric A. Blackall's style analysis of the " Sturm und Drang " period can lay a much more convincing claim to validity.21 He explains the stylistic ...
... basis is too narrow to afford results valid for the entire epoch . In contrast , Eric A. Blackall's style analysis of the " Sturm und Drang " period can lay a much more convincing claim to validity.21 He explains the stylistic ...
Page 250
... basis for literature and the subsequent flight into isolation . Seen in its entirety , Daiches's approach is too general to produce truly definitive period - style characteristics ; his concern with detailed stylistic analyses is but ...
... basis for literature and the subsequent flight into isolation . Seen in its entirety , Daiches's approach is too general to produce truly definitive period - style characteristics ; his concern with detailed stylistic analyses is but ...
Page 254
... basis for all arts , which ought to receive proper consideration as cultural - sociolog- ical background . THE EXISTENTIALIST CONTRIBUTION Existentialist literary criticism would essentially like to include all previous approaches ...
... basis for all arts , which ought to receive proper consideration as cultural - sociolog- ical background . THE EXISTENTIALIST CONTRIBUTION Existentialist literary criticism would essentially like to include all previous approaches ...
Contents
PREFACE | 1 |
THE EXISTENTIAL | 15 |
STYLISTIC FORCES IN THE NARRATIVE | 42 |
Copyright | |
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according action analysis appear approach aspects become beginning called century character coherence common concept concerned contributions course criticism cultural definition described determined direct discussion effect elements epoch essential established example existence experience expression fact feeling figures follows force freedom French function give given historical human idea important individual interest interpretation kind language laws lengths less limited linguistic literary literature logical matter meaning method mind motif narrative nature novel objective observation Paris pattern period style philosophical poetic poetry position possible present principle problem psychology question reason reference relation relationship represents result rhetoric sense sentence sequence social society space speaking speech structure stylistic symbolic thematic themes theory things thought tion traditional turn understanding University various whole writer