| Aristotle - 1927 - 528 páginas
...X¿7ei>< 7re?rXa<r/x¿i'ii)s dXXà ire^wtorus • торге ^ор тпванЬ», ineivo Se Tovvavribv, " a writer must disguise his art and give the impression...prejudiced and think we have some design against them, as if we were mixing their wines for them " (tr. Roberts). 438 after in a style meant to carry conviction."... | |
| William Rhys Roberts - 1928 - 184 páginas
...truth.' 3B If there must be art (as there surely must) it must be hidden, as Aristotle prescribes: 'A writer must disguise his art and give the impression...prejudiced and think we have some design against them, as if we were mixing their wines for them.' 3e It should be noticed that Demetrius never uses the word... | |
| Peter Auksi - 1995 - 396 páginas
..."does affect its intelligibility" (3.1.14043). And the best style will be both natural and appropriate: "a writer must disguise his art and give the impression...Naturalness is persuasive, artificiality is the contrary" (3.2.14040). Appropriateness requires a weighty, solemn style for a grave subject; and if achieved,... | |
| Robert Hariman - 2010 - 272 páginas
...Perhaps this is why Machiavelli's artistry is so subtle at precisely this point. Aristotle's observation that "a writer must disguise his art and give the...impression of speaking naturally and not artificially" had been refined within Renaissance culture to a preoccupation with suggesting mastery by ease. 16... | |
| James Arnt Aune - 2002 - 246 páginas
...twofold: ( 1 ) It is disingenuous in denying its own "rhetoricity." As Aristotle wrote in the Rhetoric, "a writer must disguise his art and give the impression of speaking naturally and not artificially" (cited in Hariman 1995: 203nl6). Realism is a form of artifice, as members of rhetorical cultures understand,... | |
| |