The Poetics of Reason: English Neoclassical CriticismRandom House, 1968 - 179 páginas |
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Página 26
... doctrine and emphasis that had enlivened literary debate since the dawn of modern criticism in Renaissance Italy , the mimetic conception of the nature of art had gone virtually unquestioned . " It is justly considered as the greatest ...
... doctrine and emphasis that had enlivened literary debate since the dawn of modern criticism in Renaissance Italy , the mimetic conception of the nature of art had gone virtually unquestioned . " It is justly considered as the greatest ...
Página 87
... doctrine did more good than harm to the creative writers who subscribed to it . Its effect on literary criticism was at least equally beneficial . In perfect keeping with the cosmology of the day , the very idea of imitating models ...
... doctrine did more good than harm to the creative writers who subscribed to it . Its effect on literary criticism was at least equally beneficial . In perfect keeping with the cosmology of the day , the very idea of imitating models ...
Página 114
... doctrines . Modern scholarship has quite effectively exposed the romantic Johnson as a historical fiction . Unfortunately , certain other claims made on his behalf , not in themselves total misinterpretations so much as interpretative ...
... doctrines . Modern scholarship has quite effectively exposed the romantic Johnson as a historical fiction . Unfortunately , certain other claims made on his behalf , not in themselves total misinterpretations so much as interpretative ...
Contenido
THE INTELLECTUAL SETTING | 3 |
THE NEOCLASSICAL AESTHETIC | 26 |
JOHN DRYDEN | 60 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Addison admired Aeneid aesthetic ancient artistic attitude Augustan beauty Ben Jonson blank verse Boileau's called character classical comedy conception Cowley creative critical theory Dennis Discourse doctrine dramatic unities Dryden eighteenth century epic Essay on Criticism example expressed fact Faerie Queene fancy French genius genre Gothic Greek heroic Homer Hurd idea imagination imitation John Johnson Johnson's critical Joseph Warton judgment kind language later less literary criticism literature Milton mimesis mind modern moral nature neoclassical neoclassical criticism neoclassicism Northrop Frye numbers observed original play pleasure poem Poesy poet poet's poetic justice poetry Pope Pope's praise Preface principle prose Rambler readers reason René rhyme Richard Richard Hurd romantic rules Rymer Samuel Johnson satire seems sense Shakespeare Spectator stage sublime T. S. Eliot taste Thomas Thomas Rymer Thomas Warton thought tion tragedy tragic translation truth Virgil words writing wrote