Writing and the BodyHarvester Press, 1982 - 142 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 3 z 25.
Strana 48
... bring things to an end , to have done with the uncertainty and multiple possibilities of life and arrive at the ultimate ' truth ' of death and destruction . " There are many events in the womb of time , which will be delivered , ' he ...
... bring things to an end , to have done with the uncertainty and multiple possibilities of life and arrive at the ultimate ' truth ' of death and destruction . " There are many events in the womb of time , which will be delivered , ' he ...
Strana 59
... bring us to the theatre in the first place . 14. As if aware of this , Shakespeare , in his last plays , changed tack completely . He seems in those plays determined to throw overboard all that the Elizabethan theatre had gained , all ...
... bring us to the theatre in the first place . 14. As if aware of this , Shakespeare , in his last plays , changed tack completely . He seems in those plays determined to throw overboard all that the Elizabethan theatre had gained , all ...
Strana 129
... bring it in not to claim Kafka for Judaism , which would be nonsense . I hope I have shown that trust is ultimately something instinctively human , lying some- where in the region between brain and wrist , and that it has nothing to do ...
... bring it in not to claim Kafka for Judaism , which would be nonsense . I hope I have shown that trust is ultimately something instinctively human , lying some- where in the region between brain and wrist , and that it has nothing to do ...
Obsah
The Body in the Library | 1 |
Everything and Nothing | 34 |
Non Ego sed Democritus dixit | 64 |
Autorské práva | |
2 zvyšných častí nezobrazených
Časté výrazy a frázy
able accept action answer artist audience authority aware becomes body bring called child comes course critical culture Dante death doubt dream Eliot everything example exist explore expression fact father feel fiction final followed forces give hand happening human Iago imagination important Kafka keep kind language later Latin leads lectures letter lines lives London look matter meaning merely mind move nature never notes novel once one's Othello perhaps person play plot poem possible precisely present question reader reality relation rhetoric scene seems seen sense Shakespeare Shandy simply someone speak speech stand Sterne story suggest talking tell thing thought tradition Tristram true trust truth turn understand voice Volume whole wonder writing written