The Future of LiteraturePhaedra, 1972 - 175 էջ |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 16–ի 1-ից 3-ը:
Էջ 13
... Aristotle the final cause of literature was regarded as the moral effect upon the audience , and 2 ) that for the last 200 years and particularly the past 75 years , the final cause of literature is thought not to be the moral effect ...
... Aristotle the final cause of literature was regarded as the moral effect upon the audience , and 2 ) that for the last 200 years and particularly the past 75 years , the final cause of literature is thought not to be the moral effect ...
Էջ 22
... Aristotle , in the POETICS , is answering Plato's objections , he does so on moral grounds . There is no use attempt- ing to conclude that the POETICS is a hedonistic document , as some have done , for the " tragic pleasure , " as Aristotle ...
... Aristotle , in the POETICS , is answering Plato's objections , he does so on moral grounds . There is no use attempt- ing to conclude that the POETICS is a hedonistic document , as some have done , for the " tragic pleasure , " as Aristotle ...
Էջ 79
... Aristotle the true tragic pleasure seemed to depend upon such a hero ; the degree to which the tragic pleasure is achieved determines the extent of the moral force of the play , and hence the extent to which the tragedy properly affects ...
... Aristotle the true tragic pleasure seemed to depend upon such a hero ; the degree to which the tragic pleasure is achieved determines the extent of the moral force of the play , and hence the extent to which the tragedy properly affects ...
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American appear Aristotle artistic ature audience characters CHIGAN comedy contemporary novel contemporary poetry denatured critic Dennis Dick-and-Jane doctrine dramatists eighteenth century example fact feeling final cause formlessness free-verse future of literature good-natured critic GRAPES OF WRATH hedonistic hence human idea imagination influence of Philosophical intellectuals John Dennis judicial critic liter literary criticism literary drama literary theory means merely method modern Molière moral effect nineteenth century novelists obscurantism osophical perhaps phenomenon Philip Roth Philosophical Classicism Philosophical Classicists Philosophical Naturalism Philosophical Naturalist Philosophical Romanticism plays pleasure poetic line poets problem purpose of literature raunchiness reader reason rhyme Romanticism and Philosophical Romantics schools self-expression serious novel seventeenth century short story Sidney Socialist Realism Soviet literature Soviet Union spiritual T. S. Eliot theater theorists Thomas Rymer tion tradition of Philosophical tragedy tragic hero truth twentieth century view of man's villains virtually Western literature words writing