Sociological Poetics And Aesthetic Theory |
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Page iv
... society . 2. Literature— Philosophy . 3. Literature - Aesthetics . I. Title . PN98.S6S95 1987 801 86-15633 ISBN 978-0-312-00039-4 ISBN 978-0-312-00040-0 ( pbk . ) Preface PARTI THEORIES OF AESTHETIC FORM 1. Poetic Theory and.
... society . 2. Literature— Philosophy . 3. Literature - Aesthetics . I. Title . PN98.S6S95 1987 801 86-15633 ISBN 978-0-312-00039-4 ISBN 978-0-312-00040-0 ( pbk . ) Preface PARTI THEORIES OF AESTHETIC FORM 1. Poetic Theory and.
Page vi
... Society 102 Genre and Popular Culture 106 Tradition and Culture 109 Hegemony 113 Author 115 5. Sociological Stylistics Style and Sociology Realism , Modernism and Narrative 119 119 124 Stylistic Analysis : Lukács and Adorno on Kafka and ...
... Society 102 Genre and Popular Culture 106 Tradition and Culture 109 Hegemony 113 Author 115 5. Sociological Stylistics Style and Sociology Realism , Modernism and Narrative 119 119 124 Stylistic Analysis : Lukács and Adorno on Kafka and ...
Page 3
... society ; different kinds of hero can be linked with changes in social and political organisation ; broad artistic move- ments , such as expressionism , realism and modernism can be read as reflections of historical development . In ...
... society ; different kinds of hero can be linked with changes in social and political organisation ; broad artistic move- ments , such as expressionism , realism and modernism can be read as reflections of historical development . In ...
Page 5
... society to develop its own form ' . Thus archetypes recur because of a conflict between desire ( human nature ) and reality , with ritual and dream ' the narrative and signifi- cant content respectively of literature in its archetypal ...
... society to develop its own form ' . Thus archetypes recur because of a conflict between desire ( human nature ) and reality , with ritual and dream ' the narrative and signifi- cant content respectively of literature in its archetypal ...
Page 6
... society . The methods appropriate to the natural sciences were thus appropriate to the study of human society and culture . But human culture consisted also of the cate- gory of understanding , the interpretation of reality by human ...
... society . The methods appropriate to the natural sciences were thus appropriate to the study of human society and culture . But human culture consisted also of the cate- gory of understanding , the interpretation of reality by human ...
Contents
3 | |
Sociological Aesthetics | 35 |
Critical Theory and Aesthetic Value | 60 |
from Mukarovsky to Goldmann | 67 |
Art and the Social | 77 |
Art as Ideology | 84 |
Historical Poetics | 99 |
Genre and Popular Culture | 106 |
Hegemony | 113 |
Sociological Stylistics | 119 |
Modernism the AvantGarde and Everyday Life | 131 |
Aesthetics and Politics | 150 |
Index | 161 |
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Common terms and phrases
active Adorno aesthetic form aesthetic theory aesthetic value alienation analysis argued art-work artistic assimilated autonomy avant-garde Bakhtin Balzac Barthes bourgeois Brecht's capitalist coherent communication complex concept consciousness constitutes criticism defined depict dialectical dialogic discourse dominant Dostoevsky economic elements embody emphasis Engels epic theatre everyday expression external fiction finalising Formalism Formalists Frankfurt School function genre Goldmann hermeneutics human ideology immanent individual interpretation Kafka language Leavis linguistic literary form Lukács Lukács's Marcuse Marx Marxist Marxist aesthetic material meaning Menippean satire modern modernist modes Mukarovsky narrative nature nineteenth-century noblesse de robe notion novel object organisation philosophical Plekhanov political polyphonic practice praxis production reader reading realism reality reception Reception aesthetics reification rejected relation role Russian Formalism Russian Formalists significant Simmel social and historical social group society socio socio-historical sociological poetics sociological positivism specific structuralist structure style stylistic tion totality tradition Trotsky unity whole world view writers