The Sociology of Literature |
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Page 2
... D. H. Lawrence's famous phrase ) one trusts the teller rather than the tale ( Wimsatt and Beardsley , 1946 ) . Whilst it is , of course , much to the credit of the Marxist founding fathers to have realised that the role of the critic is ...
... D. H. Lawrence's famous phrase ) one trusts the teller rather than the tale ( Wimsatt and Beardsley , 1946 ) . Whilst it is , of course , much to the credit of the Marxist founding fathers to have realised that the role of the critic is ...
Page 7
... D. H. Lawrence was forced to be as the result of his reactionary views . This absurdly partial view takes no cognizance of Steiner's wry realisation that artistic achievement has no absolute connection with political progressiveness ...
... D. H. Lawrence was forced to be as the result of his reactionary views . This absurdly partial view takes no cognizance of Steiner's wry realisation that artistic achievement has no absolute connection with political progressiveness ...
Page 66
... D. H. Lawrence and L. Fiedler ; their works provide a most convincing account of American literature in the light of the American ideal of equality and democracy . The general conception of the novel adopted here can be summarised by ...
... D. H. Lawrence and L. Fiedler ; their works provide a most convincing account of American literature in the light of the American ideal of equality and democracy . The general conception of the novel adopted here can be summarised by ...
Contents
The sociology of literature | 24 |
The sociology of the author | 50 |
The novel realism and modernism | 64 |
Copyright | |
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