Early Cooper and His AudienceColumbia University Press, 1986 - Počet stran: 230 |
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Strana 66
... audience is a convenient fiction that the author nurtures , consciously and un- consciously , in the supremely lonely business of writing a book : How does the writer give body to the audience for whom he writes ? It would be fatuous to ...
... audience is a convenient fiction that the author nurtures , consciously and un- consciously , in the supremely lonely business of writing a book : How does the writer give body to the audience for whom he writes ? It would be fatuous to ...
Strana 67
... audience he has learned to know not from daily life but from earlier writers who were fictionalizing in their imaginations audiences they had learned to know in still earlier writers , and so on back to the dawn of written narrative ...
... audience he has learned to know not from daily life but from earlier writers who were fictionalizing in their imaginations audiences they had learned to know in still earlier writers , and so on back to the dawn of written narrative ...
Strana 173
... audience . The exact nature of Cooper's audience is elusive . We know what Bryant and Melville , Balzac and Belinsky had to say about his works . We can cull reviews from contemporary journals and newspapers and try to establish a ...
... audience . The exact nature of Cooper's audience is elusive . We know what Bryant and Melville , Balzac and Belinsky had to say about his works . We can cull reviews from contemporary journals and newspapers and try to establish a ...
Obsah
Toward a Democratic Fiction | 1 |
The Failure of Charles Brockden Brown | 29 |
An American Novel Professedly | 63 |
Autorská práva | |
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