On EloquenceYale University Press, 01 հոկ, 2008 թ. - 208 էջ On Eloquence questions the common assumption that eloquence is merely a subset of rhetoric, a means toward a rhetorical end. Denis Donoghue, an eminent and prolific critic of the English language, holds that this assumption is erroneous. While rhetoric is the use of language to persuade people to do one thing rather than another, Donoghue maintains that eloquence is gratuitous, ideally autonomous, in speech and writing an upsurge of creative vitality for its own sake. He offers many instances of eloquence in words, and suggests the forms our appreciation of them should take. Donoghue argues persuasively that eloquence matters, that we should indeed care about it. Because we should care about any instances of freedom, independence, creative force, sprezzatura, he says, especially when we liveperhaps this is increasingly the casein a culture of the same, featuring official attitudes, stereotypes of the officially enforced values, sedated language, a politics of pacification. A noteworthy addition to Donoghues long-term project to reclaim a disinterested appreciation of literature as literature, this volume is a wise and pleasurable meditation on eloquence, its unique ability to move or give pleasure, and its intrinsic value. |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 24–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
Էջ 22
... hand . It did not occur to me until many years later when I read Ulysses that the change of one syllable from Deum to Deam would render the response disgraceful , a change effected by Stephen Dedalus , at the cost of ruining the pronoun ...
... hand . It did not occur to me until many years later when I read Ulysses that the change of one syllable from Deum to Deam would render the response disgraceful , a change effected by Stephen Dedalus , at the cost of ruining the pronoun ...
Էջ 24
... hand and , better still , our Latin teacher Mr. Crinion , who led us grace- fully through an anthology of Virgil , Ovid , and Horace and a selection of Cicero's letters and speeches . My affection for Latin pointed me toward those poems ...
... hand and , better still , our Latin teacher Mr. Crinion , who led us grace- fully through an anthology of Virgil , Ovid , and Horace and a selection of Cicero's letters and speeches . My affection for Latin pointed me toward those poems ...
Էջ 27
... hands . Professor Hogan thought that English literature in its supreme character was written in the period between the sixteenth and the nineteenth centuries : from Skelton to New- man and Hopkins , with Shakespeare and seventeenth ...
... hands . Professor Hogan thought that English literature in its supreme character was written in the period between the sixteenth and the nineteenth centuries : from Skelton to New- man and Hopkins , with Shakespeare and seventeenth ...
Էջ 30
... hand ? No , this my hand will rather The multitudinous seas incarnadine Making the green one red . ( 2.2.60–63 ) In Henry VIII Wolsey says : I shall fall Like a bright exhalation in the evening , And no man see me more . ( 3.2.225–27 ) ...
... hand ? No , this my hand will rather The multitudinous seas incarnadine Making the green one red . ( 2.2.60–63 ) In Henry VIII Wolsey says : I shall fall Like a bright exhalation in the evening , And no man see me more . ( 3.2.225–27 ) ...
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Դուք հասել եք այս գրքի դիտումների առավելագույն քանակին.
Դուք հասել եք այս գրքի դիտումների առավելագույն քանակին.
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Adorno Aeneas agile with temporal Bartleby blue Browne's Cambridge catachresis chapter claim Collected Poems context culture Dante death Derrida Dido Donne English Language Essays expression eyes feeling Finnegans Wake Flaubert Geoffrey Hill gesture gives Guy Davenport Gweneth Hugh Kenner human Hydriotaphia Ibid imagination John John Donne Kenneth Burke King knock Lady Macbeth last line Latin literary Literature live Locke London Madame Bovary means mind modern night Ophelia Oxford passage passion phrase play pleasure poet poetry Professor Hogan prose quence quoted R. P. Blackmur reader reading reason rhetoric rhyme rhythm seems sense sentence Shakespeare silence song without words soul sounds speak speech stanza Stevens story style sweet syllable T. S. Eliot take the train talk temporal intervals things thought tion trans translation tree University Press verbal W. B. Yeats William Empson Woolf writing Yeats