The Perception and Evocation of Literature |
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Page 190
... look for in poetry . Today a new poet is usually published before he is heard . It is our custom to look at poetry , to read silently the poetry we look at , to establish an intimacy between paper and words . This is a circumstance of ...
... look for in poetry . Today a new poet is usually published before he is heard . It is our custom to look at poetry , to read silently the poetry we look at , to establish an intimacy between paper and words . This is a circumstance of ...
Page 272
... look at . We look at what we think we need to look at . We ignore what seems unnecessary or , in some cases , what seems threatening . However , we are sensitive to far more stimuli than we may realize . . . . [ An ] experiment testing ...
... look at . We look at what we think we need to look at . We ignore what seems unnecessary or , in some cases , what seems threatening . However , we are sensitive to far more stimuli than we may realize . . . . [ An ] experiment testing ...
Page 332
... look at him . He is thir- ty . Atticus goes to the table and picks up a water glass . ) Tom , will you please catch ... looks in Tom's direction . ) He took ad- vantage of me . ( Atticus glances in Mayella's direction with a grim ...
... look at him . He is thir- ty . Atticus goes to the table and picks up a water glass . ) Tom , will you please catch ... looks in Tom's direction . ) He took ad- vantage of me . ( Atticus glances in Mayella's direction with a grim ...
Contents
The Uniqueness of Literature 8 | 11 |
The Presentational Mode as Creative ProblemSolving | 23 |
Behavioral Patterning | 62 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
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