The Perception and Evocation of Literature |
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Page 36
... figure of the man - they were the same age almost to a day , though neither of them ( perhaps because Wash had a grandchild while Sutpen's son was a youth in school ) ever thought of himself as being so - on the fine figure of the black ...
... figure of the man - they were the same age almost to a day , though neither of them ( perhaps because Wash had a grandchild while Sutpen's son was a youth in school ) ever thought of himself as being so - on the fine figure of the black ...
Page 170
... figures of thought as well as figures of speech . A figure of thought teases the imagination and is grasped only through an active participation in the language and situation of the literature . Irony and paradox are the two most ...
... figures of thought as well as figures of speech . A figure of thought teases the imagination and is grasped only through an active participation in the language and situation of the literature . Irony and paradox are the two most ...
Page 241
... Figure 30 William Carlos Williams Among the rain and lights I saw the figure 5 in gold on a red firetruck moving tense unheeded to gong clangs siren howls and wheels rumbling through the dark city . A number of aspects of the images of ...
... Figure 30 William Carlos Williams Among the rain and lights I saw the figure 5 in gold on a red firetruck moving tense unheeded to gong clangs siren howls and wheels rumbling through the dark city . A number of aspects of the images of ...
Contents
The Uniqueness of Literature 8 | 11 |
The Presentational Mode as Creative ProblemSolving | 23 |
Behavioral Patterning | 62 |
Copyright | |
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ain't asked Atticus audience auditory behavior body chapter characters Charles Olson chiffarobe Cinquain concrete poetry congruent Copyright create creative dialogue Directions Publishing discussion dramatic literature Dylan Thomas E. E. Cummings effect elements event evocated IMPRESSION Evoke Ewell expression eyes face feel Finch free verse gesture Gilmer happened Hardwicke-Moore Harper Lee Horton Foote images interaction interpreter Jean Toomer Kill a Mockingbird Kool-Aid language literally looked meaning metaphor metaworld meter Miss Mayella mode mythic narrator night novel oral patterns perceived perception and evocation performance of literature person play poem poet poetry presentation Press prose psychological reader Reprinted by permission rhythm sense sentence silence sonnet sound space speak speech structure student style stylistic Sutpen syllables symbolic T. S. Eliot tell theater thee thing thought tion Tom Robinson understood and evocated verse visual voice Wire words writer