A Cry Over the Abyss: The Discourse of Power in the Poetry of Robert Browning and Algernon Charles SwinburneWydaw. UO, 2004 - 258 من الصفحات |
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النتائج 1-3 من 63
الصفحة 36
... comes quite naturally , therefore , to acknowledge ( paraphrasing Hei- degger ) that there is no other way to language than in , through , and with po- etry : poetry is itself the primordial source of language and art . However , we are ...
... comes quite naturally , therefore , to acknowledge ( paraphrasing Hei- degger ) that there is no other way to language than in , through , and with po- etry : poetry is itself the primordial source of language and art . However , we are ...
الصفحة 93
... comes into the world through woman ' - every priest knows that likewise . ' Consequently , science too comes into the world through her ' . Only through woman did man learn to taste of the tree of knowledge . - What had happened ? A ...
... comes into the world through woman ' - every priest knows that likewise . ' Consequently , science too comes into the world through her ' . Only through woman did man learn to taste of the tree of knowledge . - What had happened ? A ...
الصفحة 101
... come yet , the prophet of a philosophy of the future ( “ I come too early [ ... ] my time has not yet come " ) . Thus , indirectly Nietzsche identified himself with the madman , since , as the subtitle to Beyond Good and Evil suggests ...
... come yet , the prophet of a philosophy of the future ( “ I come too early [ ... ] my time has not yet come " ) . Thus , indirectly Nietzsche identified himself with the madman , since , as the subtitle to Beyond Good and Evil suggests ...
المحتوى
Acknowledgements | 9 |
In search of a theory | 25 |
The discourse of power | 45 |
حقوق النشر | |
5 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
abyss argues assertion becomes believe body Browning Browning's called century chapter character Christ Christianity comes complete concept conclusion created critical dead death definition desire discourse discourse of power divine earth effect element English eternal evil existence expression eyes fear feeling female figure final force Foucault give God's hand Heidegger human idea indicates instance interpretation Italy kind kiss knowledge language later light literary live lover madness male man's matter meaning mental metaphysics mind moral nature never Nietzsche Nietzsche's notion object original pain Paracelsus particularly person philosophy poem poet poetry possesses possible present question reality reason relations revealed Robert seems sense sexual soul speaks strength strong Swinburne Swinburne's thee theory things thinking thou thought tion truth turn University values Victorian whole woman writing