The Oral Interpretation of LiteratureMcGraw-Hill, 1963 - 330 Seiten |
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Seite 95
... speak to his listeners . in many instances , it is impossible , and perhaps unnecessary , to know whether the author is speaking directly or indirectly . Is the man speak- ing in the poem " Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening " Frost ...
... speak to his listeners . in many instances , it is impossible , and perhaps unnecessary , to know whether the author is speaking directly or indirectly . Is the man speak- ing in the poem " Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening " Frost ...
Seite 96
... speaking most di- rectly to us . Shakespeare has Iago speak the noble lines : " Who steals my purse , steals trash " ; and Polonius says : " This above all : to thine own self be true . " Yet , neither Iago nor Polonius are to be ...
... speaking most di- rectly to us . Shakespeare has Iago speak the noble lines : " Who steals my purse , steals trash " ; and Polonius says : " This above all : to thine own self be true . " Yet , neither Iago nor Polonius are to be ...
Seite 181
... speaking and would hesitate to trust themselves to speaking from an outline . Such persons deserve to be heard , and it seems more plausible to instruct them in proper reading habits than it does to insist that they surrender the ...
... speaking and would hesitate to trust themselves to speaking from an outline . Such persons deserve to be heard , and it seems more plausible to instruct them in proper reading habits than it does to insist that they surrender the ...
Inhalt
Preface | 3 |
The unique values of oral interpretation | 11 |
The contribution of oral interpretation to its allied areas | 21 |
Urheberrecht | |
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The Oral Interpretation of Literature (Classic Reprint) Chloe Armstrong Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2018 |
The Oral Interpretation of Literature (Classic Reprint) Chloe Armstrong Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2016 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
achieve Aimee Slocum alliteration Alma aloud Auden audience Bassett Bible Carson chapter characters choose Company Copyright criticism develop discussion Dorothy Wordsworth drama effect elements Ellisville emotional empathy essay Eudora Welty evaluate experience factors feel fiction figures of speech fluoridation give idea imagery Index introduction Japs journal language Last Duchess Lily Daw listeners literary literature manuscript material meaning meter Miss Welty mood narrative narrator offered onomatopoeia oral interpretation oral reader oral reading person pitch play plot poem poet poetry present preter prose Reprinted by permission response rhyme rhythm Robert Frost Robert Penn Warren selection short story silent reading sound speaking staged reading stanza student style Summer and Smoke symbolism T. S. Eliot tank tempo theme thought Three Ladies tion tone trench understanding voice W. H. Auden Watts Welty's William Faulkner words Wordsworth writing xylophone York