Rhetorical Analyses of Literary WorksEdward P. J. Corbett Oxford University Press, 1969 - 272页 |
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共有 32 个结果,这是第 1-3 个
第xiii页
... modes of appeal tie in quite neatly with the three ele- ments that figure in any rhetorical situation - the speaker ... mode of criticism and other modes . But perhaps I should first try to account for the con- fluence of rhetoric and ...
... modes of appeal tie in quite neatly with the three ele- ments that figure in any rhetorical situation - the speaker ... mode of criticism and other modes . But perhaps I should first try to account for the con- fluence of rhetoric and ...
第xvi页
... mode of criticism which regards the work in relationship to its author . This is the kind of criticism that is interested primarily in the psychology of the cre- ative act . So the Expressive Critic “ reads back ” from the work to its ...
... mode of criticism which regards the work in relationship to its author . This is the kind of criticism that is interested primarily in the psychology of the cre- ative act . So the Expressive Critic “ reads back ” from the work to its ...
第xvii页
... mode of criticism . And having set it in a context with other modes of criticism , I can now go on to sharpen the picture of its modus operandi . It can be said , first of all , that rhetorical criticism is a mode of analysis that ...
... mode of criticism . And having set it in a context with other modes of criticism , I can now go on to sharpen the picture of its modus operandi . It can be said , first of all , that rhetorical criticism is a mode of analysis that ...
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常见术语和短语
Abraham Fraunce aesthetic Andrew Marvell Apologia appear Arbuthnot argument Aristotle audience believe Caesar carpe diem cause chapter character Christian Church Colin Clout Coy Mistress Deist devices diction discourse Donne Donne's dramatic Dryden effect Elder Olson elocutio Emma Emma's emotional ence English enthymeme epideictic Epistle Essays established example figures Frank Churchill Fraunce Gibbon grammatical hate mee imagery irony James James's Jane Austen judgment Kenneth Burke kind Knightley lines literary logic lovers lyric Marvell's meaning ment metaphor mimesis mind mode of criticism modern moral Newman's novel object paragraph passage person persuasion PMLA poem poet poetic poetry Pope Pope's praise present principle proof prose Ramist readers reason Religio Laici religious Renaissance rhetorical analysis rhetorical criticism rhetorical structure rhetorician Satire says sense sentence speaker speech Spenser stanza statement Strether's style stylistic suggest Swift syntactical things thought tion truth verse virtue words writing