Time and the NovelHumanities Press, 1972 - 245 էջ |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 18–ի 1-ից 3-ը:
Էջ 75
... digression and the tale within the tale ; he related the story or digression to its environment instead of giving it ... digressions as soon as they constitute integral and intransposable elements of his story , achieve a multiple ...
... digression and the tale within the tale ; he related the story or digression to its environment instead of giving it ... digressions as soon as they constitute integral and intransposable elements of his story , achieve a multiple ...
Էջ 179
... digressive skill ' , namely that tho ' my digressions are all fair , as you observe - and that I fly off from what I am about , as far , and as often too , as any writer in Great - Britain ; yet I constantly take care to order affairs ...
... digressive skill ' , namely that tho ' my digressions are all fair , as you observe - and that I fly off from what I am about , as far , and as often too , as any writer in Great - Britain ; yet I constantly take care to order affairs ...
Էջ 180
... digression . Fortunately it is not a life of Tristram Shandy , and uncle Toby and aunt Dinah are not digressions , but take their place in the book in their own right . The greatness of Sterne lies precisely in this , that the different ...
... digression . Fortunately it is not a life of Tristram Shandy , and uncle Toby and aunt Dinah are not digressions , but take their place in the book in their own right . The greatness of Sterne lies precisely in this , that the different ...
Բովանդակություն
The timeobsession of fiction | 10 |
The time and the space arts | 23 |
The time problems of fiction | 30 |
Հեղինակային իրավունք | |
15 այլ բաժինները չեն ցուցադրվում
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
Common terms and phrases
action artistic causality century characters chronological duration clock consciousness contemporary conventions convey critics Dalloway device digressions Dorothy Richardson dramatic effect epic episodes experience exposition expression feeling fictive present Ford Madox Ford Gertrude Stein Gide give happened Henry James hero historical human illusion imagination impression incident interest Joseph Conrad language limited literature living matter meaning medium method mind modern fiction narration narrative nature novelist omniscient author Orlando painting passage past pattern person novel plane play plot plot novel poetry Preface principle problems progression Proust psychological duration qu'il reader reading reality relation Richardson romances scene selection sense sequence significance Sterne story structure suspense technique temporal tense theme theory thing Thomas Mann thought time-arts time-shift tion Tom Jones Tristram Shandy truth Uncle Toby values Virginia Woolf Walter Shandy whole words writer Writer's present Wyndham Lewis