The Critical Reader: Analyzing and Judging LiteratureF. Ungar Pub.Company, 1978 - 199 Seiten |
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Seite 67
... epic question at the beginning of most epics , whereby the poet calls on the Muses for help and asks a key question which introduces the main subject of the poem . Ancient Genres : Drama , Epic , and Lyric To cut through the seemingly ...
... epic question at the beginning of most epics , whereby the poet calls on the Muses for help and asks a key question which introduces the main subject of the poem . Ancient Genres : Drama , Epic , and Lyric To cut through the seemingly ...
Seite 68
... epic tends to have a less tight structure than the drama , sometimes even becoming episodic : presenting , that is , a series of loosely related incidents , as in the Odyssey . It is clear that in Virgil's Aeneid tightly and loosely ...
... epic tends to have a less tight structure than the drama , sometimes even becoming episodic : presenting , that is , a series of loosely related incidents , as in the Odyssey . It is clear that in Virgil's Aeneid tightly and loosely ...
Seite 82
... epic , also known as high burlesque . In this , the characters and situations are treated more seriously , more hero- ically , than is warranted . The classic example is The Rape of the Lock , in which Pope describes the snipping of a ...
... epic , also known as high burlesque . In this , the characters and situations are treated more seriously , more hero- ically , than is warranted . The classic example is The Rape of the Lock , in which Pope describes the snipping of a ...
Inhalt
The Definition of Literature | 1 |
The Analysis of Literature | 18 |
Literary Traditions and Conventions | 64 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action allegory Aristotle audience beauty C. S. Lewis called characters classical comedy comic complex considered contrast conventions describe devices Divine Comedy drama E. M. Forster effect eighteenth century emotions emphasis English epic example experience expressed fact Faerie Queene feel fiction figures Furthermore genre Hamlet hero human iambic iambic pentameter ideas Iliad imitation instance interpretation kind King King Lear language less lines literal literary literature lover Lycidas lyric Major Barbara matter meaning metaphor Milton Moby-Dick modern moral musical narrative neoclassicism novel Oedipus pastoral pattern philosophical phrase play plot poem poet poetic poetry problem prose psychological reading recognize rhyme rhythm romantic romanticism satire scenes seems sense Shakespeare social sometimes sonnet Sophocles stanza story structure suggests syllable symbolic syntax T. S. Eliot term theme theory tion tone traditional tragedy tragicomedy truth various verse W. H. Auden words Wordsworth writers