Great Ideas in the Western Literary CanonUniversity Press of America, 2003 - 244 頁 This book examines 'great ideas'- the term used generically to refer to the deep-seated anxieties that art, religion and philosophy all seek to address- in relation to a selection of great literary texts. The texts chosen are those that remain, often centuries after their appearance, beacons of illumination and wisdom. The twelve chapters of this book each deal with one great text and the central idea that propels it. The ideas are examined as events possessed of their own field of resonance, and it is by tracing them in their narrative, dramatic or lyrical development that one can appreciate how these great texts speak as powerfully as they do to generations of readers. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 15 筆
第 vi 頁
... achieved . Rather , we are putting forward , as our method , an attempt to trace the imaginary dialogue that inheres in great literary texts , between the ideas they contain and those ideas that history never ceases to produce and ...
... achieved . Rather , we are putting forward , as our method , an attempt to trace the imaginary dialogue that inheres in great literary texts , between the ideas they contain and those ideas that history never ceases to produce and ...
第 29 頁
... achieved technically by the multiple reversals and recognitions of which we have given several examples and in which , if we are to believe Aristotle , Sophocles more than any other tragedian has proved his mastery . This is not to ...
... achieved technically by the multiple reversals and recognitions of which we have given several examples and in which , if we are to believe Aristotle , Sophocles more than any other tragedian has proved his mastery . This is not to ...
第 57 頁
... achieve sufficient cooperation to achieve this end . So far , Dante is a disciple of Aristotle . But , he goes far beyond Aristotle , and shows his debt to the Romans , in his belief that a worldly emporium is required to create ...
... achieve sufficient cooperation to achieve this end . So far , Dante is a disciple of Aristotle . But , he goes far beyond Aristotle , and shows his debt to the Romans , in his belief that a worldly emporium is required to create ...
內容
The Religion of Fear | 19 |
The Power of Love | 37 |
Rabelais Vitalism OR Feasting Flagons | 61 |
著作權所有 | |
10 個其他區段未顯示
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
Achilles aesthetic Agamemnon Aloysha Antonio Ariel Baudelaire Baudelaire's become believe Brothers Karamazov Caliban chapter character Charles Baudelaire Chitterlings Christian Church Comedy creates Dante Dante's death desire devil divine Dmitry Don Quixote Dostoyevsky dream emotional ennui existence faith father Faust fear feeling Flowers of Evil forces freedom Fyodor Gargantua Gargantua and Pantagruel God's gods Gonzalo Greek heart Heaven Hell hero Homer human idea Inferno Inquisitor Ivan Ivan's Joyce Joyce's king knight literary live London Mephistopheles Milton Miranda moral narrative narrator nature novel Oedipus Oedipus the King pagan Paissy Pantagruel Panurge Paradise Patroclus philosophical play poem poet poetic poetry political pride Prospero Proust Purgatorio Rabelais rage Rakitin reader religious Robert Fagles Roman Satan says scene Search of Lost sense Shakespeare Smerdyakov social Sophocles soul spirit steeple Stephen suffering tells Tempest tragedy truth University Press Virgil virtue vision wants wisdom words writing Zossima