Soliloquy in Nineteenth-century FictionBarnes & Noble Books, 1987 - 223 pagina's To find more information about Rowman and Littlefield titles, please visit www.rowmanlittlefield.com. |
Inhoudsopgave
Autodiction or Consciousness Narrating Itself | 7 |
Soliloquy as a Reflection of the Victorian Frame | 34 |
SelfNegation | 58 |
Copyright | |
6 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
absorptive ambiguity Amelia asserts Austen autodiction autodictor Becky Becky's Carlyle Carton Catherine character characterized Charlotte Brontë confronts contrast cosmic monologue create creative death depicts Dickens Dickens's direct discourse Dobbin Dorothea dramatic Emily Brontë emotional example external feelings finally frame free indirect speech future George Eliot Hamlet Heathcliff identity imagery inner insight interior monologue Jane Austen Jane Eyre Jane's John Harmon language Lucy melodramatic rhetoric Middlemarch mind mode Modernist moral narrative narrator narrator's Nelly novel novelists outlook paradoxical parallel past pattern Pen's Pendennis problem problem-solving projection rationalization reader recognize reflects regret rendered in free resolution resolve revenge rhetoric of isolation rhetoric of transcendence role seems self-creation self-debate self-division self-goading self-negation sense sentimentalist social boundaries society soliloquist soliloquy's solution stream of consciousness Sydney Carton Thackeray Thackeray's thought turn University Press unspoken soliloquy Vanity Fair Victorian voice Warrington Woolf Wuthering Heights York
Verwijzingen naar dit boek
Galdós's Segunda Manera: Rhetorical Strategies and Affective Response Linda M. Willem Fragmentweergave - 1998 |