Twentieth Century Interpretations of Robinson Crusoe: A Collection of Critical EssaysFrank Hale Ellis Prentice-Hall, 1969 - 118 páginas Long relegated to the world of children's literature, Defoe's disarmingly simple tale emerges as a meaningful, symbolic commentary on the human condition. |
Contenido
Introduction by Frank H Ellis | 1 |
Ј Robinson Crusoe by Virginia Woolf | 19 |
Robinson Crusoe Individualism and the Novel | 39 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 6 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
Adventures of Robinson Aitken Alexander Selkirk allegory boat cannibals character Charles Gildon Coleridge conversion creatures critics Crusoe's Daniel Defoe Defoe's hero desert island Dottin dream E. M. W. Tillyard effect England English Englishman episode Eric Berne Essay experience exploration fact Farther Adventures fiction Friday G. A. Aitken goats God's happens hero's homo economicus human Ian Watt imagination invention irony isolation kind labour land literary lives London man's matter mind modern Moll Flanders narrative nature never novel novelist Oxford passage production prose Providence published Puritan read Robinson Crusoe reader religion religious repentance Reprinted by permission Robinson Crusoe savage Selkirk sense Serious Reflections ship shipwreck shore social society solitary solitude soul spiritual story Strange Surprizing Adventures suggest symbolic theme things thou thought tion trade travel books travel literature University V. S. Pritchett voyage wild wolves Woodes Rogers wreck writing wrote York