Insinuation: The Tactics of English SatireMouton, 1971 - 142 páginas |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-3 de 5
Página 33
... Freud in Jokes and Their Relation to the Unconscious , his chief contribution to aesthetics , has a number of things to say which seem to suggest reasons why the satirist enjoys writing satire and we enjoy reading it . Freud argues that ...
... Freud in Jokes and Their Relation to the Unconscious , his chief contribution to aesthetics , has a number of things to say which seem to suggest reasons why the satirist enjoys writing satire and we enjoy reading it . Freud argues that ...
Página 34
... Freud argues , enable jokes to produce the kind and quantity of pleasure they do . It will be sufficient for our present purposes merely to indicate what seem to be the most suggestive inferences which we can draw from Freud's study . A ...
... Freud argues , enable jokes to produce the kind and quantity of pleasure they do . It will be sufficient for our present purposes merely to indicate what seem to be the most suggestive inferences which we can draw from Freud's study . A ...
Página 35
... Freud observes " What these jokes [ we should read " certain kinds of satires " ] whisper may be said aloud : that ... Freud , Jokes , p . 95 . 32 Freud , Jokes , p . 110 . themselves and the world around them and move them to A ...
... Freud observes " What these jokes [ we should read " certain kinds of satires " ] whisper may be said aloud : that ... Freud , Jokes , p . 95 . 32 Freud , Jokes , p . 110 . themselves and the world around them and move them to A ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Palavras e frases frequentes
absurd adapted aggressive Alexander Pope appear argue association attack audience blameworthy burlesque Canterbury Tales character Charles Churchill Chaucer contemporary context contrast course criticism Defoe describe devices direct discussed Dryden E. B. White E. E. Cummings English satire Erewhon essay Evelyn Waugh example fact folly formal verse satire frequently Freud Friar Gatsby genre Gulliver Gulliver's Travels Higgs high burlesque Hudibras human implies indirect satire ingénu insinuate blame irony Jesuits joke Jonathan Swift kind least literary London Mac Flecknoe manner of proceeding meaning Miss mixed satire modern Modest Proposal moral narrator non-satiric norm novels object original overstatement Oxford parody passage persona perspective pleasure poem Poetical Pope's portrait praise Prioress projector Prose reader reason rhetorical Samuel Butler satiric effect satiric point satiric shock satiric tactic satirist Satyr says seems sense shift sometimes speaker structure Struldbrug suggest things tion University Press words writer York