The Living EyeThis volume is a translation of selections of L'Oeil vivant (1961 and 70). Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or. |
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Page 61
... social inequal- ity , and subservience to opinion not by regressing to the unreflective life but by drawing upon all the consequences of his perfectible nature . Rousseau's divided feelings about reflection call for a more general ...
... social inequal- ity , and subservience to opinion not by regressing to the unreflective life but by drawing upon all the consequences of his perfectible nature . Rousseau's divided feelings about reflection call for a more general ...
Page 91
... social success . Mark well the fact that he entered the social fray before trying the literary one . Even when he began to write , his goal was primarily to win prestige , not to produce a body of work . In seeking literary celebrity ...
... social success . Mark well the fact that he entered the social fray before trying the literary one . Even when he began to write , his goal was primarily to win prestige , not to produce a body of work . In seeking literary celebrity ...
Page 222
... social and emotional relations that it depicts , using an essentially stylistic analysis of a text that describes a scene . After first identifying the key vectors , I then tried to describe them in the currently available vocabulary ...
... social and emotional relations that it depicts , using an essentially stylistic analysis of a text that describes a scene . After first identifying the key vectors , I then tried to describe them in the currently available vocabulary ...
Contents
JeanJacques Rousseau and the Peril of Reflection | 14 |
Pseudonymous Stendhal | 78 |
The Critical Relation | 112 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
aorist tense autobiography becomes Confessions consciousness criticism desire discourse Discourse on Inequality distance divine dreams Emile Benveniste emotion event existence expression external eyes fact fascination feeling fiction Freud gaze glance Hamlet happiness Hence hero Ibid imaginary imagination initial inner innocence interpretation intuition invented Jean-Jacques Jean-Jacques Rousseau Jean-Jacques's knowledge language literary literature longer look Ludwig Binswanger Mademoiselle de Breil Marcel Raymond mask meaning metamorphosis method mirror motto myth narcissism narration narrative nature neurosis never object Oedipus Oedipus complex Oedipus Rex once oneself Paris passion past perfect person play pleasure possession possible present pseudonyms psychoanalysis psychological pure reality reason reflection relation remains reveals reverie role Rousseau scene seeks sensation sense Shakespeare's Sigmund Freud situation social society sometimes soul speak Stendhal style symbolic takes theme things third-person narrative thought transformation truth Turin uncon unconscious witness words writing