Writing and the BodyHarvester Press, 1982 - 142 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 3 z 34.
Strana 38
... turn up at any time and claim our main attention . It is thus to Figaro and The Magic Flute that Frye turns when looking for parallels to Twelfth Night and The Tempest , and to operatic terms when trying to describe individual works ...
... turn up at any time and claim our main attention . It is thus to Figaro and The Magic Flute that Frye turns when looking for parallels to Twelfth Night and The Tempest , and to operatic terms when trying to describe individual works ...
Strana 111
... turn him away from the truth , will turn even death itself into another story . Writing reinforces our belief in our own immortality by helping us to avoid the acceptance of our bodies . One of the little stories that make up Kafka's ...
... turn him away from the truth , will turn even death itself into another story . Writing reinforces our belief in our own immortality by helping us to avoid the acceptance of our bodies . One of the little stories that make up Kafka's ...
Strana 113
... turns out that the condemned man does not know the sentence that has been passed on him . ' There would be no point ... turning point is reckoned to come at the sixth hour .... The first six hours the con- demned man stays alive almost ...
... turns out that the condemned man does not know the sentence that has been passed on him . ' There would be no point ... turning point is reckoned to come at the sixth hour .... The first six hours the con- demned man stays alive almost ...
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
action Alexander Goehr artist audience aware body Borges Brabantio called Cassio child course critical culture curiosity Dante death Democritus Desdemona despair Dora Dymant drama dream Eliot epic epigraph everything explore fact father feel fiction Freud Frye hand Iago Iago's imagination instinctively Kafka kind language Latin lectures Leontes letter Leverkühn lives London look Luria Malvolio meaning metaphor move Muriel Spark nature never novel one's opera Othello parody perhaps perpetual person Pierre Menard play plot poem possible Prospero Prufrock question quotation reader realise reality rhetoric Roderigo Roger Moss scene seems sense Shakespeare silence someone speak speech Stephen Albert Sterne Sterne's story story-telling Stravinsky suggest talking tell thing thought Toby Toby's tradition Tristram Shandy trust truth turn Twelfth Night Virgil Virginia Woolf voice Volume Walter Walter Benjamin wonder words writing written Yorick Zeitblom