Attitudes Toward History, Third Edition: With a New AfterwordUniversity of California Press, 1984年6月5日 - 434页 This book marks Kenneth Burke’s breakthrough in criticism from the literary and aesthetic into social theory and the philosophy of history. In this volume we find Burke’s first entry into what he calls his theory of Dramatism; and here also is an important section on the nature of ritual. |
目录
WILLIAM JAMES WHITMAN AND EMERSON | 3 |
POETIC CATEGORIES | 34 |
THE DESTINY OF ACCEPTANCE FRAMES | 92 |
CONCLUSION | 106 |
MEDIAEVAL SYNTHESIS | 124 |
PROTESTANT TRANSITION | 135 |
NAIVE CAPITALISM | 142 |
EMERGENT COLLECTIVISM | 159 |
COMIC CORRECTIVES | 166 |
GENERAL NATURE OF RITUAL | 179 |
DICTIONARY OF PIVOTAL TERMS | 216 |
CONCLUSION | 339 |
AFTERWORD TO SECOND EDITION | 345 |
THE SEVEN OFFICES | 353 |
ATTITUDES TOWARD HISTORY | 377 |
其他版本 - 查看全部
常见术语和短语
abstract action alienation Aristotle attitude becomes bourgeois bureaucratization capitalist casuistic stretching casuistry church Clara Zetkin class struggle co-ordinates comedy comic frame concept connotations corporate corporate identity critical cues cultural debunking developed dispossessed doctrine economic efficiency emphasis enterprise essence esthetic Fascist feel feudal forensic frame of acceptance function Hence Hesiod human I. A. Richards ideal identify identity imagery imaginative implicit individual ingredient insofar instance investment involved Kenneth Burke kind logic Logological magic Malthusian limits Marx Marxist material matter ment metaphor mimetic mode moral motives nature neo-Malthusian organized pattern perspective by incongruity philosophy Plato poet political possible principle Protestantism psychological purely rational rejection relationships ritual role secular prayer sense shift situation social Sociological Imagination spiritual stress structure symbols of authority things thought tion tragedy tragic transcendence transvaluation of values variant vocabulary whereby words writer