The Liberal Imagination: Essays on Literature and Society, Zväzok 7Oxford University Press, 1981 - 284 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 3 z 14.
Strana 14
... Dreiser is to be accepted and forgiven because his faults are the sad , lovable , honorable faults of reality itself , or of America itself — huge , inchoate , struggling toward ex- pression , caught between the dream of raw power and ...
... Dreiser is to be accepted and forgiven because his faults are the sad , lovable , honorable faults of reality itself , or of America itself — huge , inchoate , struggling toward ex- pression , caught between the dream of raw power and ...
Strana 17
... Dreiser at sixty . And yet there is for him always the vaulgarly saving suspicion that maybe , when all is said and done , there is Something Behind It All . It is much to the point of his in- tellectual vulgarity that Dreiser's anti ...
... Dreiser at sixty . And yet there is for him always the vaulgarly saving suspicion that maybe , when all is said and done , there is Something Behind It All . It is much to the point of his in- tellectual vulgarity that Dreiser's anti ...
Strana 19
... Dreiser's own emotion at the end of his life , who would not be happy that he had achieved it ? I am not even sure that our civilization would not be the better for more of us knowing and desiring this emotion of grave felicity . Yet ...
... Dreiser's own emotion at the end of his life , who would not be happy that he had achieved it ? I am not even sure that our civilization would not be the better for more of us knowing and desiring this emotion of grave felicity . Yet ...
Obsah
Preface vii | 3 |
Sherwood Anderson | 21 |
The Princess Casamassima | 56 |
Autorské práva | |
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admirable aesthetic American anarchism Anderson artist assumption aware become believe called conceived connection conscious course criticism culture D. H. Lawrence deal dream Dreiser effect elements Eliot emotions essay existence experience fact fantasy feeling Fitzgerald Freud Freudian Gatsby genius give glory Henry James hero Huckleberry Finn human Hyacinth ideal ideas illusion imagination implies impulse intellectual intention interest James's kind Kipling less liberal literary literature Mark Twain matter means mental merely mind modern moral moral realism nature neurosis neurotic never notion novel novelist Parrington Partisan Review passion perhaps poem poet poetic poetry political Princess Casamassima prose psychoanalysis question reader reality relation Report Romantic seems sense sexual Shakespeare Sherwood Anderson social society speaks suggests T. S. Eliot Tacitus tells theory thing thought tion tradition truth unconscious unconscious mind understand virtue wholly word Wordsworth writers