The Atlantic Literary Review, Volume 2,Edições 1-2Atlantic Publishers and Distributors, 2001 |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-3 de 30
Página 163
... Wilson apply to irony , is between use and mention : " USE of an expression involves reference to what the expression refers to ; MENTION involves reference to the expression itself " ( 1981 : 303 , capitals as in the original ) . The ...
... Wilson apply to irony , is between use and mention : " USE of an expression involves reference to what the expression refers to ; MENTION involves reference to the expression itself " ( 1981 : 303 , capitals as in the original ) . The ...
Página 166
... Wilson's major work , Relevance ( 1986 , 1995 ) , also devotes a section to irony . There is no revision of the trends of analysis of irony put forward in 1981 ( 1978 ) , but their proposal is limited to the application of the general ...
... Wilson's major work , Relevance ( 1986 , 1995 ) , also devotes a section to irony . There is no revision of the trends of analysis of irony put forward in 1981 ( 1978 ) , but their proposal is limited to the application of the general ...
Página 189
... Wilson . 1981. " Irony and the Use - Mention Distinction . " Radical Pragmatics . Ed . P. Cole . New York : Academic Press . 295-318 . and D. Wilson . 1982. “ Mutual Knowledge and Relevance in Theories of Comprehension . " Mutual ...
... Wilson . 1981. " Irony and the Use - Mention Distinction . " Radical Pragmatics . Ed . P. Cole . New York : Academic Press . 295-318 . and D. Wilson . 1982. “ Mutual Knowledge and Relevance in Theories of Comprehension . " Mutual ...
Índice
THE ATLANTIC LITERARY REVIEW | 1 |
Ana Bringas | 24 |
Paula GarcíaRamírez | 42 |
11 outras secções não apresentadas
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Palavras e frases frequentes
American analysis anthologies appears attempt authority becomes Bertha Black body British called characters child Christian colonial communication concern construction context create critical cultural death described desire discourse dream English experience fact female feminist fiction figure hand human identity images imagination important Indian individual interpretation irony Italy Jane John kind knowledge language literary literature live London look madness meaning memory moral myth narrative native nature never notes notion novel Orient past person perspective play poetics poetry political position possible present published question reader reading reality reason reference relation relationship relevance represents response role sense sexual slave slavery social society space Sperber story structure suggests tells theory traditional Travels understanding University Utopia utterance voice Western Wilson woman women writing York young