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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الصفحة 212
... narrative that encapsulates or some- how reflects the larger structures within which it is held ; it is a mirroring of the text by the subtext " ( 53-54 ) . For example , my analogy using the verbot Sylvie at the beginning of this ...
... narrative that encapsulates or some- how reflects the larger structures within which it is held ; it is a mirroring of the text by the subtext " ( 53-54 ) . For example , my analogy using the verbot Sylvie at the beginning of this ...
الصفحة 228
... narrative is misread his monologues " since , as he openly admits , " nearly everyone of Browning's monologists has a near obsession with words " ( p . 73 ) . This near obsession with words results , in most poems , in a lack of logical ...
... narrative is misread his monologues " since , as he openly admits , " nearly everyone of Browning's monologists has a near obsession with words " ( p . 73 ) . This near obsession with words results , in most poems , in a lack of logical ...
الصفحة 237
... The interpretation of the text does not propose its meaning as any substitu- tive entity ; rather , it proposes that in the hypothesization of the narrative links among its spectral names the reader is involved in 237 Miscellanea.
... The interpretation of the text does not propose its meaning as any substitu- tive entity ; rather , it proposes that in the hypothesization of the narrative links among its spectral names the reader is involved in 237 Miscellanea.
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