Linguistics and the Study of LiteratureTheo d' Haen, Theo d'. Haen Rodopi, 1986 - 287 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 42
Página 8
... appears interminable ( e.g. Knight , 1982 ; Ferrar , 1984 ) and still bears treaces of the Fowler - Bateson controversy at the end of the nineteen - sixties ( see Fowler , 1971 ) . The most recent studies in linguistic stylistics have ...
... appears interminable ( e.g. Knight , 1982 ; Ferrar , 1984 ) and still bears treaces of the Fowler - Bateson controversy at the end of the nineteen - sixties ( see Fowler , 1971 ) . The most recent studies in linguistic stylistics have ...
Página 10
... appear to surface most markedly . Firstly , it is naïve to pretend that any application of linguistic knowledge , whether modelled or otherwise and however dedicatedly and rigorously formalised the model , can result in an " objective ...
... appear to surface most markedly . Firstly , it is naïve to pretend that any application of linguistic knowledge , whether modelled or otherwise and however dedicatedly and rigorously formalised the model , can result in an " objective ...
Página 12
... appears to be sociolinguistic , that is , in a direction pointed by Traugott and Pratt ( 1980 ) in their excellent introductory textbook and towards a view of style as less text - immanent than as existing within a more dynamic domain ...
... appears to be sociolinguistic , that is , in a direction pointed by Traugott and Pratt ( 1980 ) in their excellent introductory textbook and towards a view of style as less text - immanent than as existing within a more dynamic domain ...
Página 19
... appear to be no rules for relating specific surface linguistic features to specific ideological functions . Until such equations can be more explicitly formulated or , more probably , modes of analysis from non - linguistic disciplines ...
... appear to be no rules for relating specific surface linguistic features to specific ideological functions . Until such equations can be more explicitly formulated or , more probably , modes of analysis from non - linguistic disciplines ...
Página 22
... appears impossibly self - referring and narcissistic , then one answer can be to point out that stylistic analysis can be a starting point for understanding the partiality of our readings in the face of the plurality of meanings all ...
... appears impossibly self - referring and narcissistic , then one answer can be to point out that stylistic analysis can be a starting point for understanding the partiality of our readings in the face of the plurality of meanings all ...
Contenido
1 | |
Realist or Romantic? Philip Larkins Modes of Writing | 27 |
Peter Verdonk | 42 |
Elizabeth Newman | 56 |
Donald C Freeman | 72 |
Vimala Herman | 89 |
Georgian Poetry | 112 |
Walter Nash | 128 |
Michael H Short | 152 |
Roger Fowler | 187 |
Mieke | 201 |
André Lefevere | 218 |
J G Schippers | 245 |
Willie van Peer | 268 |
Términos y frases comunes
action Amsterdam Bo Bo clause communication complex concept constraints context dark David Lodge deictic expressions discourse English Essays example expressed fact fiction foregrounded Fowler function Gerard Manley Hopkins grammatical Hopkins ideology interpretation Jakobson Keats kind language Larkin Leech lexical linguistic list construction literary criticism literary stylistics literary texts literature London meaning metaphor metonymic metre metrical mode motif musical scansion narrative narratology narrator noun object Ode to Psyche Oeuvres pattern Philip Larkin phonaesthetic phonetic play poem poem's poet poetic poetry polysyndetic pragmatic pronoun R.S. Thomas reader reading reference relation rewriting Roger Fowler role Roman Jakobson Samson scansion semantic semiotic sentence Shakespeare social sound speaker speech act Sprung Rhythm stanza Stoppard's stories stressed structure Style stylistic analysis stylisticians suggest syllables syntactic T.S. Eliot theory tion translation University Press utterance verb words writing ZANGLER