Rhetorical Traditions and British Romantic LiteratureDon H. Bialostosky, Lawrence D. Needham Indiana University Press, 1995 - 312 So successful were the appeals to "genius" by the romantic poets that few critics since have paid much attention to the influence of rhetorical traditions on romantic expression. As the essays in this collection demonstrate, though the status of classical rhetoric declined during the nineteenth century, romantic genius did not sweep away rhetoric. Romantic writers drew upon a number of rhetorical traditions - sophistic, classical, biblical, and enlightenment - in the creation of their art, and interest in various aspects of the art of discourse remained strong. These essays - half of them commissioned for this volume - document the importance of these traditions in shaping the poetry, novels, and criticism of Coleridge, De Quincey, Wordsworth, Shelley, Blake, Austen, and Scott. |
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Strona 149
... apostrophe in relation to the figures of prosopopoeia and ecphonesis in order to view its particular function within a larger oratorical structure of address . 149 Romantic Aversions Apostrophe Reconsidered J Douglas Kneale.
... apostrophe in relation to the figures of prosopopoeia and ecphonesis in order to view its particular function within a larger oratorical structure of address . 149 Romantic Aversions Apostrophe Reconsidered J Douglas Kneale.
Strona 155
... prosopopoeia , " the master trope of poetic discourse " ( Resistance 48 ) . And when Riffaterre answers de Man's charges concerning his poetics of reading , he entitles his response simply " Prosopopeia . ” Apostro- phe is related to ...
... prosopopoeia , " the master trope of poetic discourse " ( Resistance 48 ) . And when Riffaterre answers de Man's charges concerning his poetics of reading , he entitles his response simply " Prosopopeia . ” Apostro- phe is related to ...
Strona 305
... prosopopoeia , 154 , 155-56 confused with address , 154-55 definitions of , 150-53 function of , 151 in The Prelude , 143 misunderstood , 163n17 asyndeton , 71 chiasmus , 12 , 23-25 , 39 , 43 ecphonesis , 150 , 153 epanaphora , 224 ...
... prosopopoeia , 154 , 155-56 confused with address , 154-55 definitions of , 150-53 function of , 151 in The Prelude , 143 misunderstood , 163n17 asyndeton , 71 chiasmus , 12 , 23-25 , 39 , 43 ecphonesis , 150 , 153 epanaphora , 224 ...
Spis treści
The Method of The Friend | 11 |
Comparing Power | 28 |
De Quinceys Rhetoric of Display and Confessions | 48 |
Prawa autorskie | |
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Rhetorical Traditions and British Romantic Literature Don H. Bialostosky,Lawrence D. Needham Ograniczony podgląd - 1995 |
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Aeschines aesthetic apostrophe appears argues argument Aristotle audience Austen Blair Blake's Book century character chiasmus Cicero Cintra tract claims classical rhetoric Coleridge Coleridge's communication Convention of Cintra conversation critical Culler daisy Demosthenes discourse discussion ecphonesis edition effect eighteenth-century eloquence emotions English epideictic essay example expression feelings figure Friend genius genres Greek Heart of Midlothian Hebrew human Hume Hume's imagination invention Jonathan Culler language Lectures lines literary literature Lowth lyric Lyrical Ballads M. H. Abrams method mind narrative nature object opium-eater oral orator Oratore passage passions persuasion philosophical poem poet poetic poetry political practice praise Prelude prophecy prophetic prose prosopopoeia Quincey Quincey's Quintilian readers reading Renaissance rhetorical tradition Rhetoricians Robert Lowth Romantic Romanticism sense Shelley Shelley's simile social sophists speak speaker speech style sublime theory things thou thought tion topics trope truth turn verse voice William Wordsworth words Wordsworth writing