The Sociology of Literature |
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Page 29
... Certainly he was aware of the weakness of Wells's whole approach and made this clear to Wells in a letter of 1903 : For this is what in the last and most general pronouncement the book amounts to . It is - and as a matter of fact the ...
... Certainly he was aware of the weakness of Wells's whole approach and made this clear to Wells in a letter of 1903 : For this is what in the last and most general pronouncement the book amounts to . It is - and as a matter of fact the ...
Page 149
... certainly has no love of new and facile cultural phenomena produced by super affluent societies , but his dislike differs from the hatred exhibited towards them by Bell in that it is based on a horror of the complete innocuousness of ...
... certainly has no love of new and facile cultural phenomena produced by super affluent societies , but his dislike differs from the hatred exhibited towards them by Bell in that it is based on a horror of the complete innocuousness of ...
Page 151
... certainly helped channel the imagination of George Eliot and , despite appearances , that of Dickens . Certainly the merits of ' Bourgeois Literacy ' far outweigh the usual Marxist analysis of ' Bourgeois Literature ' - although , as ...
... certainly helped channel the imagination of George Eliot and , despite appearances , that of Dickens . Certainly the merits of ' Bourgeois Literacy ' far outweigh the usual Marxist analysis of ' Bourgeois Literature ' - although , as ...
Contents
The sociology of literature | 24 |
The sociology of the author | 50 |
The novel realism and modernism | 64 |
Copyright | |
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