An Introduction to Literature: The nature of drama, by H. HeffnerHerbert Barrows, Hubert C. Heffner, John Ciardi, Gordon Norton Ray, Wallace Warner Douglas Houghton Mifflin, 1959 - 1331 страници This collection is designed to introduce college students to literature. Each volume focuses on a specific area, wherein the characteristics, conventions, and special effects of each kind of writing are set out, the critical terms are introduced, and each editor brings their viewpoint to the task. The editors of this book see literature as an unending source of delight, and propose analysis to the student not as an end in itself, but as a means of widening the range of comprehension, the deepening of enjoyment for literature as more fully comprehended. Each book features introductions that explore the type of literature addressed, brief author biographies, and a series of questions designed to allow students to exercise their critical and analytical faculties. |
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Страница 340
... action , but un- like other kinds , it allows the agents in that action to represent directly their characters , emotions , and deeds . Drama resembles lyric poetry in its concern for sensations , feelings , emotions , moods , thoughts ...
... action , but un- like other kinds , it allows the agents in that action to represent directly their characters , emotions , and deeds . Drama resembles lyric poetry in its concern for sensations , feelings , emotions , moods , thoughts ...
Страница 341
... action of drama has always the illusion of being present action . Even though the action of the play ostensibly occurs in the past and in a distant place , the spectator in viewing it imagines himself to be " there . " The action of an ...
... action of drama has always the illusion of being present action . Even though the action of the play ostensibly occurs in the past and in a distant place , the spectator in viewing it imagines himself to be " there . " The action of an ...
Страница 344
... action in which human characters are the agents . In terms of these human agents , an action may move between two ex- tremes , as from happiness to unhappiness or from unhappiness to happi- ness . A change toward unhappiness tends to ...
... action in which human characters are the agents . In terms of these human agents , an action may move between two ex- tremes , as from happiness to unhappiness or from unhappiness to happi- ness . A change toward unhappiness tends to ...
Съдържание
INTRODUCTION | 339 |
Henrik Ibsen | 352 |
Oscar Wilde | 430 |
Авторско право | |
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Често срещани думи и фрази
action ACTORS afraid afther agen ALGERNON ÁNYA attic Aunt Augusta BARBARA Bentham BOYLE Bunbury BURGESS CANDIDA CECILY chair characters CHARLOTTE CHASUBLE cherry orchard child comedy comes comic crying darlin dear door drama DUNYASHA EKDAL Enter EPHIKHÓDOF Ernest Eugene Exit eyes FATHER feel FIRS GAYEF GINA give goes goin Graaberg GREGERS GUEST GWENDOLEN hand happy hear heard HEDVIG HJALMAR JACK James JERRY JOHNNY JOXER Juno LADY BRACKNELL laughing LEADING LADY LEXY live look LOPÁKHIN MADAME PACE MADAME RANÉVSKY MADIGAN mamma MANAGER MARCHBANKS married MARY mean MERRIMAN MISS PRISM Molvik MORELL mother never nice pause PETTERSEN PÍSHTCHIK play poor PROSERPINE RELLING sits sofa SÖRBY speak stand STEPDAUGHTER suppose sure talk tell Thank There's thing thought to-morrow TROPHÍMOF turning understand voice wait WERLE What's wild duck woman YÁSHA