The Speaking and the Speakers of LiteratureDickenson Publishing Company, 1967 - 164 pages |
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
One The who of literature | 13 |
Two The what of literature | 21 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
approach to literature attitude basic beauty become Benét Bernard Spencer certainly clearly combination consider context Copyright create Criticism described diction dramatic E. E. Cummings Edwin Arlington Robinson Edwin Honig Ego and Motion Ego thought elements emotional example excerpt expressed fact feelings function gestures heron I. A. Richards imaginative important involved John Ciardi lines literary lovers Mary Lou material movement nonpoetry Northrop Frye one's oral interpretation oral reader pain performance techniques perhaps person piece of literature poem poet poetic poetry point of view possible predictable prose prose-nonpoetry prose-poetry reader-audience reader-speaker reading aloud reality response rhythm rhythmic structure seems selection sense sequence Snowy Heron sort speak speaker says speakers of literature specific speech stanza statement Stephen Vincent Benét symbolism Theobald thing tion unreal verse verse-nonpoetry verse-poetry visual voice W. H. Auden W. K. Wimsatt Well-Tempered Critic woman words writer York