College Literature, Volume 10Bernard Stanley Oldsey West Chester State College., 1983 - American literature |
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Page 88
... relation between the forms of James's fictions and their meanings : " Only by considering simultaneously James's treatment of his reader and his treatment of his characters can we properly take the measure of his fiction , and this task ...
... relation between the forms of James's fictions and their meanings : " Only by considering simultaneously James's treatment of his reader and his treatment of his characters can we properly take the measure of his fiction , and this task ...
Page 133
... relation , a solicitation paralleling that of the narrator eyeing the passenger in the rail- road car , as well as her own opening of a narrative relation in the Under- cliff . She also imposes her demands for submission that end ...
... relation , a solicitation paralleling that of the narrator eyeing the passenger in the rail- road car , as well as her own opening of a narrative relation in the Under- cliff . She also imposes her demands for submission that end ...
Page 334
... relation to one another . Thus the literary character can never be defined in isolation but only in relation to the story as a whole . The student will im- mediately recognize , once it is pointed out , that this organic view of charac ...
... relation to one another . Thus the literary character can never be defined in isolation but only in relation to the story as a whole . The student will im- mediately recognize , once it is pointed out , that this organic view of charac ...
Contents
College Literature | 2 |
VOLUME X | 97 |
College Literature | 98 |
Copyright | |
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Achilles Ahab American approach audience Barthes beginning Brownlee chapter character College Literature comedy comic creative process criticism death discussion Divine Comedy dramatic English Ernest Hemingway essay experience Farewell to Arms Faulkner fiction final Fisher King Fitzgerald Fowles French Lieutenant's Woman Gatsby Hamlet Hemingway Hemingway's Homais human hunger Iliad interpretation Ivan Jonson Joyce Kübler-Ross language literary loss manuscript meaning Melville Melville's metafiction metaphor Moby Dick Moby-Dick modern moral myth narrative narrator nature never Nick novel past perspective play plot poem poet poetic poetry Pope Pope's present psychological reader reading Robert satire scene scepticism seems sense sexual Shakespeare short stories snow social sonnets stage stanza structure suggests Sun Also Rises T. S. Eliot teaching textual theatre theme theory things tion Tiresias tradition University Press Volpone Waste Land West Chester woman words writing York