A History of Literary Criticism: From Plato to the PresentJohn Wiley & Sons, 15 apr 2008 - 848 pagina's This comprehensive guide to the history of literary criticism from antiquity to the present day provides an authoritative overview of the major movements, figures, and texts of literary criticism, as well as surveying their cultural, historical, and philosophical contexts.
|
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 85
Pagina 17
... Aristotle's authority, Plato's own ideas were indebted to a pre-Socratic tradition of naturalism, which attempts to offer an alternative account of the world, one that is not poetic or mythical or based on tradition but which appeals ...
... Aristotle's authority, Plato's own ideas were indebted to a pre-Socratic tradition of naturalism, which attempts to offer an alternative account of the world, one that is not poetic or mythical or based on tradition but which appeals ...
Pagina 41
... Aristotle was young, but it is said that he taught his son some anatomy, an early training which may have contributed to Aristotle's eventual philosophical outlook. Indeed, Aristotle was more interested than Plato in empirical ...
... Aristotle was young, but it is said that he taught his son some anatomy, an early training which may have contributed to Aristotle's eventual philosophical outlook. Indeed, Aristotle was more interested than Plato in empirical ...
Pagina 42
... Aristotle chose to avoid letting the Athenians “sin twice against philosophy” and moved to Chalcis in Macedonia. Aristotle's. Metaphysics. At the heart of Aristotle's metaphysics and logic is the concept of substance. In his Metaphysics ...
... Aristotle chose to avoid letting the Athenians “sin twice against philosophy” and moved to Chalcis in Macedonia. Aristotle's. Metaphysics. At the heart of Aristotle's metaphysics and logic is the concept of substance. In his Metaphysics ...
Pagina 43
... Aristotle's view of substance as the subject of predication represents a sharp break from the Platonic Forms, and was indeed to some extent worked out as part of Aristotle's critique of those Forms. Aristotle sometimes expresses great ...
... Aristotle's view of substance as the subject of predication represents a sharp break from the Platonic Forms, and was indeed to some extent worked out as part of Aristotle's critique of those Forms. Aristotle sometimes expresses great ...
Pagina 44
... Aristotle urges that universals depend on particular things for their existence, not vice versa. A quality such as “blackness” can exist in a man but it has no independent life. Aristotle's rejection of the world of Forms and his ...
... Aristotle urges that universals depend on particular things for their existence, not vice versa. A quality such as “blackness” can exist in a man but it has no independent life. Aristotle's rejection of the world of Forms and his ...
Inhoudsopgave
1 | |
7 | |
63 | |
From Plato to the Present Part III Greek and Latin Criticism During the Roman Empire | 103 |
From Plato to the Present Part IV The Medieval Era | 149 |
From Plato to the Present Part V The Early Modern Period to the Enlightenment | 227 |
From Plato to the Present Part VI The Earlier Nineteenth Century and Romanticism | 347 |
From Plato to the Present Part VII The Later Nineteenth Century | 467 |
From Plato to the Present Part VIII The Twentieth Century | 555 |
From Plato to the Present Epilogue | 772 |
From Plato to the Present Selective Bibliography | 777 |
From Plato to the Present Index | 791 |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
A History of Literary Criticism and Theory: From Plato to the Present M. A. R. Habib Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2005 |
A History of Literary Criticism: From Plato to the Present M. A. R. Habib Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2007 |
A History of Literary Criticism and Theory: From Plato to the Present M. A. R. Habib Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2008 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
aesthetic Aristotle Aristotle’s artistic audience authority Barthes beauty bourgeois century Christian Cicero classical Coleridge concept consciousness context cultural Derrida dialectic discourse divine economic effectively elements emotion Enlightenment Enneads essay experience expressed feminist French French Revolution Freud function grammar Greek Hegel Hence Hereafter cited heteroglossia Horace’s human Ibn Rushd ideal ideas ideological imagination imitation individual influence insists intellectual judgment Kant Kant’s knowledge Lacan language linguistic literary criticism literary theory literature logic Longinus man’s Marx Marxist meaning medieval merely metaphor metonymy mind modern moral myth nature Neo-Platonism Nietzsche notion object philosophy Plato pleasure Plotinus poem poet poet’s poetic poetry political principles Quintilian rational reader realism reality realm reason relation Renaissance Revolution rhetoric Romantic Romanticism says sense signifier social Socrates soul speech spirit structure sublime T. S. Eliot theory things thinkers thought tion tradition truth understanding unity universal various women words writers