Yearbook of Comparative Criticism, Volume 3Joseph Strelka |
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Page 83
... feelings and emotions of the speaking subject . This is well known ; what is perhaps less so , and what I have tried to show , is that the predicative phrase and the prosodic line constitute two distinct semeiological systems . The ...
... feelings and emotions of the speaking subject . This is well known ; what is perhaps less so , and what I have tried to show , is that the predicative phrase and the prosodic line constitute two distinct semeiological systems . The ...
Page 84
... feelings that he experiences himself with regard to both the statement and the secondary speaker . For example : John tells Jim that he has been ill , although the form and intonation of the sentence express the feeling of self - pity ...
... feelings that he experiences himself with regard to both the statement and the secondary speaker . For example : John tells Jim that he has been ill , although the form and intonation of the sentence express the feeling of self - pity ...
Page 161
... feeling , yet like them it is a concept of similar generality . It covers perceiving , remembering , and imagining . As such , it denotes a function of conscious life just like conation and feeling . All three are diverse modes of ...
... feeling , yet like them it is a concept of similar generality . It covers perceiving , remembering , and imagining . As such , it denotes a function of conscious life just like conation and feeling . All three are diverse modes of ...
Contents
PREFACE | 1 |
THE EXISTENTIAL | 15 |
STYLISTIC FORCES IN THE NARRATIVE | 42 |
Copyright | |
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