Every Artist His Own Scandal: A Study of Real and Fictive HeroesHorizon Press, 1964 - 255 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 231
... sexual experience ( to all appear- ances ) is to be held responsible . The just answer must be that sexual passion has no true human existence until it is given a definite worth , and that the omission to assess it truly , to give it ...
... sexual experience ( to all appear- ances ) is to be held responsible . The just answer must be that sexual passion has no true human existence until it is given a definite worth , and that the omission to assess it truly , to give it ...
Página 236
... sexual virtue , he demonstrates , and the sooner children learn the " awful truth " about the sexual passion , the better , but they can never really learn it from lies about sex or from having sexual knowledge held up to them as ...
... sexual virtue , he demonstrates , and the sooner children learn the " awful truth " about the sexual passion , the better , but they can never really learn it from lies about sex or from having sexual knowledge held up to them as ...
Página 236
... sexual virtue , he demonstrates , and the sooner children learn the " awful truth " about the sexual passion , the better , but they can never really learn it from lies about sex or from having sexual knowledge held up to them as ...
... sexual virtue , he demonstrates , and the sooner children learn the " awful truth " about the sexual passion , the better , but they can never really learn it from lies about sex or from having sexual knowledge held up to them as ...
Contenido
Introduction to the Cell | 15 |
Nijinskys AntiSanity | 25 |
Richard IIs Rebellious Abdication | 33 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 8 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Every Artist His Own Scandal: A Study of Real and Fictive Heroes Parker Tyler Vista de fragmentos - 1964 |
Every Artist His Own Scandal: A Study of Real and Fictive Heroes Parker Tyler Vista de fragmentos - 1964 |
Términos y frases comunes
absurd action ambiguity artist Axel BECK Billy Billy Budd Billy's Briss Caligula Cell of Pure character consciousness Corvick's crime critic death Diaghilev dialectic divine Dostoievsky drama Durtal emotional enthusiasm epilepsy Esseintes esthetic experience Fabrizio false hero fate father feeling fiction genius George Posey Ghost Gide guilt Hamlet Hamlet-being Hecuba Henry Henry IV hero human idea ideal Igitur imagination incest individual irony James James's Josephine Kafka Kierkegaard king Lafcadio's live logical madness magic Mallarmé marriage mean Melville's metaphor metaphysical Milly moral mother murder Myshkin naïve Narrator nature never Nijinsky Nijinsky's novel object Oedipus Ophelia oracle ORCUTT passion patricide philosophic physical play poet poetic political possessed Proust Pure Contemplation reality repetition Richard Richard II Romola Nijinsky Sacred Fount secret seems sense sexual Shakespeare Shatov social Socrates soliloquies spirit Stavrogin story surrogate symbol thing thought tion tragedy tragic transcendent truth Verhovensky WALLACE Zeus