Yearbook of Comparative Criticism, Volume 2Joseph Strelka |
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Page 24
... principle . This great program failed ( as all similar ones have ) for two equally instructive reasons . First , Coleridge's great root principle , deduced from the nature of man and the cosmos , was impossibly general , so that he was ...
... principle . This great program failed ( as all similar ones have ) for two equally instructive reasons . First , Coleridge's great root principle , deduced from the nature of man and the cosmos , was impossibly general , so that he was ...
Page 82
... principle . You know how far it got Descartes . But in the twentieth century we have not yet reached Descartes with this principle . There was still a second question that had to be answered , namely : what exactly is that which is ...
... principle . You know how far it got Descartes . But in the twentieth century we have not yet reached Descartes with this principle . There was still a second question that had to be answered , namely : what exactly is that which is ...
Page 100
... principle ; it strives for maximum pleasure , just as an infant does . Opposite the pleasure principle stands the reality principle which demands that we adapt ourselves to the requirements of civilization , a task we can accomplish ...
... principle ; it strives for maximum pleasure , just as an infant does . Opposite the pleasure principle stands the reality principle which demands that we adapt ourselves to the requirements of civilization , a task we can accomplish ...
Contents
THE PROBLEM OF LITERARY EVALUATION | 3 |
CONTEXTS OF LITERARY EVALUATION | 14 |
PRIVILEGED CRITERIA IN LITERARY EVALUATION | 22 |
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A. K. Coomaraswamy aesthetic value analysis archetype Aristotle artistic Ästhetik basic beautiful become C. G. Jung century cognition concept consciousness contents course creative criteria criterion culture defined descriptive definitions dreams element emotional essay existence experience expression fact Freud Friedrich Schlegel function genre Goethe Hermann Broch human I. A. Richards Ibid idea import individual interpretation intrinsic judge Jung Jung's kind kitsch knowledge language linguistic literary criticism literary evaluation literature logical meaning merely method mind nature norms Northrop Frye Norwegian language novel object perceived Petrarchan sonnet Physicalistic Plato poem poet poetic poetry possible principle problem produce psychological question reader relation relationship René Guénon René Wellek Roman Ingarden Schiller sense social speak specific standards structure symbols taste themal themes things tion true uncon unconscious understanding value feeling value judgments Wellek words work's writer