The Function of Mimesis and Its DeclineHarvard University Press, 1968 - 317 pàgines |
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Pàgina 178
... DIDACTIC POETRY Ideally speaking , there is a place in the mimetic tradition for a genre of didactic poetry . True , such poetry would tend to be abstract or idealistic , and to present materials less cre- atively transformed . Yet we ...
... DIDACTIC POETRY Ideally speaking , there is a place in the mimetic tradition for a genre of didactic poetry . True , such poetry would tend to be abstract or idealistic , and to present materials less cre- atively transformed . Yet we ...
Pàgina 199
... didactic function of poetry . The history of the confusion of poetry with rhetoric is a long one . This confusion tended to accompany a decline in a philosophical and metempirical view of nature and of poetry . The vacuum was usually ...
... didactic function of poetry . The history of the confusion of poetry with rhetoric is a long one . This confusion tended to accompany a decline in a philosophical and metempirical view of nature and of poetry . The vacuum was usually ...
Pàgina 283
... Didactic poetry resembles rhetoric more closely than any other kind of poetry , its main function being to teach and its secondary function to please . This tendency so to split the functions of the didactic emphasizes Johnson's ...
... Didactic poetry resembles rhetoric more closely than any other kind of poetry , its main function being to teach and its secondary function to please . This tendency so to split the functions of the didactic emphasizes Johnson's ...
Continguts
Three Views and Three Phases I | 1 |
The Cognitive Element | 51 |
The Structural Element | 130 |
Copyright | |
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achieved Addison aesthetic analogy Aristotelian Aristotle audience autonomy beauty chapter Christian claim Classical comedy concept context cultural deism Dennis derived didactic discussion divine doctrine drama Dryden eighteenth century eighteenth-century critics emotions empirical empiricism epic epistemology Essays ethical experience F. L. Lucas function of poetry genre Greek hence Horace Horace's Horatian Horatian formula Hugh Blair human Ibid idea ideal imitation intellectual intuition John John Dennis John Dryden katharsis kind knowledge limits Literary Criticism literature London meaning ment metaphysical metonymy mimesis mimetic mind moral climate moralistic nature Neoclassical Neoplatonic Neoptolemus notion object passions philosophy Plato pleasurable contemplation plot poem poet poet's poetic justice poetic theory precisely probable problem psychological Randall rationalism realism reality reason Renaissance rhetorical Samuel Johnson satire says scientism sense speaking stress structure style tended tendency things thought tion tradition tragedy transcendent truth ultimate University Press virtue Wimsatt word