How to Read a PoemJohn Wiley & Sons, 2006 M10 20 - 194 páginas Lucid, entertaining and full of insight, How To Read A Poem is designed to banish the intimidation that too often attends the subject of poetry, and in doing so to bring it into the personal possession of the students and the general reader.
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... Language Formalists 25 25 28 31 38 41 48 1 Literariness 48 2 Estrangement 49 3 The Semiotics of Yury Lotman 52 4 The Incarnational Fallacy 59 4 In Pursuit of Form 1 The Meaning of Form 2 Form versus Content 3 Form as Transcending ...
... Language Formalists 25 25 28 31 38 41 48 1 Literariness 48 2 Estrangement 49 3 The Semiotics of Yury Lotman 52 4 The Incarnational Fallacy 59 4 In Pursuit of Form 1 The Meaning of Form 2 Form versus Content 3 Form as Transcending ...
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Contenido
Chapter 1 The Functions of Criticism | 1 |
Chapter 2 What is Poetry? | 25 |
Chapter 3 Formalists | 48 |
Chapter 4 In Pursuit of Form | 65 |
Chapter 5 How to Read a Poem | 102 |
Chapter 6 Four Nature Poems | 143 |
Glossary | 165 |
169 | |
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Términos y frases comunes
abstract actually aesthetic allegory alliteration ambiguity claim complex cultural death discourse distinction Eagleton effect emotional Empson English everyday example experience F. R. Leavis fact faggots feeling fiction figures form and content Formalists heroic couplets human I. A. Richards iambic pentameter idea imagery imagination kind language less literary criticism literature Lotman lover matter meaning meant metaphor metre metrical metrical foot modern mood moral Nature object para-rhyme pattern perhaps phrase piece poem poem's poet poet’s poetic poetry political pragmatic question reader relation repetition rhetoric rhyme scheme rhythm seems seen sense Shakespeare signifier simply singing social sort sound speak speaker speech stanza suggests surely syllable symbolic syntax T. S. Eliot Terry Eagleton texture theory things tone true truth verbal verse voice W. B. Yeats W. H. Auden whereas whole William William Empson words Wordsworth writing Yeats Yury Lotman