What is Literary Language?Open University Press, 1988 - 116 pages |
Contents
British and American Concepts of Literature | 10 |
Modernism and Formalism | 22 |
Language Structures in Literature | 36 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
alliteration ambiguity argued argument associated assonance aural Bakhtin Barthes called century concept couplet crucial D. H. Lawrence deconstruction defined Derrida DISCUSSION distinction dominant Empson English essay example exists F. R. Leavis Finnegans Wake Formalists function George Eliot gives Harmondsworth Heidegger historical I. A. Richards idea ideological implies Jakobson Joyce Julia Kristeva Keats Kristeva Lacan langue Lawrence Leavis linguistic literary language literature look Mallarmé meaning metaphor and metonymy metonymy Milton Modernist Nietzsche novel ordinary language passage Paul persuasive play poem poet poetic language poetry position possible prose question Quintilian quoted reader reading reference referential repetition repressed rhetorical devices rhyme rhythm Riffaterre Roland Barthes Russian Formalism Saussure Saussure's seems semiotic sense sentence signifier Sonnet sound speaking speech statement stress structure style suggests symbolic order T. S. Eliot things thought tradition tropes truth verse voice William Empson words writing
References to this book
Investigating English Discourse: Language, Literacy, Literature Ronald Carter No preview available - 2002 |