Journal of Tamil Studies, 第 19-20 期International Institute of Tamil Studies, 1981 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 21 筆
第 85 頁
... employed the objective omni- scient point of view . When the omniscient narrator refrains from any comment on the action , his presentation is said to be objective , even though we recognise that through selection and arrangement he can ...
... employed the objective omni- scient point of view . When the omniscient narrator refrains from any comment on the action , his presentation is said to be objective , even though we recognise that through selection and arrangement he can ...
第 86 頁
... employed Anavar as the sole narrator , the novel would not have acquired realistic touches . Even Kanakalinkam , Venkatecan and Nallayyan might not have narrated so realistically as the author himself narrated it from the omniscient ...
... employed Anavar as the sole narrator , the novel would not have acquired realistic touches . Even Kanakalinkam , Venkatecan and Nallayyan might not have narrated so realistically as the author himself narrated it from the omniscient ...
第 95 頁
... employed in Karittuṇļu plain flash back . The first technique had been employed by the author very successfully in Kayamai . In this story the author who portrays the relationship between Anavar and Vacikaram does not explain , even at ...
... employed in Karittuṇļu plain flash back . The first technique had been employed by the author very successfully in Kayamai . In this story the author who portrays the relationship between Anavar and Vacikaram does not explain , even at ...