Studies in Interpretation, Volume 1Rodopi, 1973 - 362 pages |
Contents
1 | |
13 | |
Judith Espinola | 29 |
Mary S Strine | 45 |
Lee Hudson | 59 |
Paul H Gray | 77 |
Grannell | 99 |
Donald R Salper | 115 |
Brandes | 125 |
Marion Kleinau and Thomas Isbell | 139 |
Richard Haas | 157 |
W Keith Henning | 167 |
Sheron Dailey Pattison | 183 |
Common terms and phrases
action Allen Ginsberg analysis anapests artist aspect audience Bacon Barthes Barthes's becomes behavior boss Burke character concept concrete poetry concretists consciousness Copyright create critic dialogue dimension discourse discussion dramatic effect emotional essay example experience facial expression feeling Flannery O'Connor free indirect speech Frost function Geiger gesture iamb iambic inspiration inter interior distance interpreter's Kenneth Burke language Lighthouse literary literature meaning Metaphor mind montage movement narrative narrator Nonverbal Communication novel oral interpretation oral reading performance person Phenomenology physical Plato play poem poet poet's poetic point of view present Press preter readers theatre reality relationship response rhapsode Rhetoric rhythm Robert Robert Frost scene script sense silent reading sincerity Sirens of Titan Socrates sound speaker speaking speech spondee structure student suggest Tarwater theory thought tion trochee understanding Univ University variations vocal voice Wapshot Chronicle Wheelwright Williams words writer York
Popular passages
Page 18 - Mr. Puff, as he knows all this, why does Sir Walter go on telling him ? Puff.