The Idea of Authorship in America: Democratic Poetics from Franklin to MelvilleUniversity of Wisconsin Press, 1990 - 268 páginas |
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Página xvi
... reader is , if we may put it this way , the empirical condition produced by his faith . Finally , as he trusted , his reader was someone on whom he could count , and so the individuals he writes for are already his readers . His commu ...
... reader is , if we may put it this way , the empirical condition produced by his faith . Finally , as he trusted , his reader was someone on whom he could count , and so the individuals he writes for are already his readers . His commu ...
Página 100
... reader is not direct . Some prior agreement , a relation already formalized in the past , intervenes between them . The writer and the reader are not quite denied . They remain the foundation of the work . But as the work is made ...
... reader is not direct . Some prior agreement , a relation already formalized in the past , intervenes between them . The writer and the reader are not quite denied . They remain the foundation of the work . But as the work is made ...
Página 194
... reader as I live " of Melville's first and autobiographical work , Typee . It is the " We are off " of the still quasi - autobiographical portion of Mardi . Only where , in the other authors we have dis- cussed , the fall of ...
... reader as I live " of Melville's first and autobiographical work , Typee . It is the " We are off " of the still quasi - autobiographical portion of Mardi . Only where , in the other authors we have dis- cussed , the fall of ...
Índice
Charles Brockden Brown and | 39 |
Coopers Myth | 78 |
Poe and Plagiarism | 118 |
Direitos de autor | |
2 outras secções não apresentadas
Palavras e frases frequentes
accept accordingly alienation allegory already American appears assert attempt audience authorship Autobiography become beginning Brockden Brown career character Charles claim conceived concern Confidence-Man continue Cooper course critics culture death democratic deny describes difference difficulty discussed division early effect established evident example exists explain fact fiction finally force formalism Franklin give hand Hawthorne Hawthorne's independent Indian individual kind language least less letter literature living longer matter meaning Melville Melville's Moby-Dick moral narrative nature never noted novel object once opposition particular perhaps Poe's position precisely present Press problem reader reason reference refusal relation remains representative responsibility rhetorical romantic seems seen sense separation sort speak stands story Studies taken tale tells thing tion true truth turn Univ whole writing written York
Referências a este livro
Master Plots: Race and the Founding of an American Literature, 1787-1845 Jared Gardner Pré-visualização limitada - 2000 |
Charles Brockden Brown and the Literary Magazine: Cultural Journalism in the ... Michael Cody Pré-visualização limitada - 2004 |