Chaos in the Novel: The Novel in ChaosKnopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 1974 - 400 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 74
Seite 231
... experience seems worthless and wasteful ? Once the impression of repetition - always a com- mon technique for writers of chaos - becomes mere repetition , the reader's tedium is hardly compensated for by the knowledge that tedium is the ...
... experience seems worthless and wasteful ? Once the impression of repetition - always a com- mon technique for writers of chaos - becomes mere repetition , the reader's tedium is hardly compensated for by the knowledge that tedium is the ...
Seite 386
... experience . Traditionally vision has communicated itself to the reader through particular people and experiences whose universality made them accessible to us . Certainly , the most irritating quality of many experimental writers is ...
... experience . Traditionally vision has communicated itself to the reader through particular people and experiences whose universality made them accessible to us . Certainly , the most irritating quality of many experimental writers is ...
Seite 387
... experience is recognized , and literature has no reason to exist as genuine probing of the human experience . Unless the experimental writer becomes more willing to universalize his private vision by providing a ful- ✓ ly - drawn ...
... experience is recognized , and literature has no reason to exist as genuine probing of the human experience . Unless the experimental writer becomes more willing to universalize his private vision by providing a ful- ✓ ly - drawn ...
Inhalt
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
Tristram Shandy | 29 |
THE WHITENESS OF THE WHALE TURNED | 52 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
absurd aesthetic Alain Robbe-Grillet artist attempt Beckett becomes begin Bulkaen Burroughs chaos chaotic vision character conception Confidence-Man confusion conscious consider create creation cutup darkness dream emotional existence experience Faulkner feel finally forces future page references Genet Harcamone human imagination Jean Genet Joe Christmas Kafka language Lily lives logic longer Lord Jim Malone Malone Dies man's Marlow matter meaning Melville Melville's metaphor Mettray mind Moby-Dick Molloy Moran mystery Myth of Sisyphus Naked Lunch narrative narrator never novel novelist objects once passage perhaps philosophical possible reader reality Robbe-Grillet Samuel Beckett scene seems sense Shandy significance silence simply Soft Machine Sterne Sterne's story structure struggle suddenly symbol techniques things Ticket That Exploded tion traditional Tristram Tristram Shandy truth trying Virginia Woolf voice Voyeur Walter Shandy Watt Woolf words writer