An Introduction to Literature, Criticism, and Theory: Key Critical ConceptsPrentice Hall, 1995 - 238 էջ An Introduction to Literature, Criticism and Theory is an indispensable guide. In twenty-four short, compelling and highly readable chapters, this book presents the key critical concepts in literary studies today. Bennett and Royle avoid the jargonistic, abstract nature of much 'theory'. Instead they explore crucial issues in contemporary criticism and theory by focusing closely on a range of literary texts - from Chaucer to Achebe, from Milton to Morrison. This book is essential reading for students of literature and English Studies. It can also be recommended as a general introduction for students in the humanities. |
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Արդյունքներ 19–ի 1-ից 3-ը:
Էջ 156
... Jane and Rochester after Jane has become both professionally and economically independent . Jane's struggle for independence marks the novel as centrally engaged with the predicament of women in nineteenth - century England , with their ...
... Jane and Rochester after Jane has become both professionally and economically independent . Jane's struggle for independence marks the novel as centrally engaged with the predicament of women in nineteenth - century England , with their ...
Էջ 159
... Jane : ' look at the difference ! Compare these clear eyes with the red balls yonder – this face with that mask – this form with that bulk ' ( 322 ) . By contrasting the two women , Rochester makes it clear that Bertha should be ...
... Jane : ' look at the difference ! Compare these clear eyes with the red balls yonder – this face with that mask – this form with that bulk ' ( 322 ) . By contrasting the two women , Rochester makes it clear that Bertha should be ...
Էջ 201
... Jane Eyre . More fundamentally still , it puts a light to all our assumptions about Brontë's novel , it calls on us to reread and rethink the whole of Jane Eyre and its place and significance in the ( white , middle - class or ...
... Jane Eyre . More fundamentally still , it puts a light to all our assumptions about Brontë's novel , it calls on us to reread and rethink the whole of Jane Eyre and its place and significance in the ( white , middle - class or ...
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