| Michel Foucault - 1980 - 244 str.
...back upon the enigma of its own origin and existing wholly in reference to the pure act of writing. Literature becomes progressively more differentiated...intransitivity; it becomes detached from all the values which were able to keep it in general circulation during the Classical age (taste, pleasure, naturalness,... | |
| Michael Boyd - 1983 - 200 str.
...being of language. Against the background of this essential interaction, the rest is merely effect: literature becomes progressively more differentiated...encloses itself within a radical intransitivity ... it breaks with the whole definition of genres as forms adapted to an order of representations, and becomes... | |
| Antoine Berman - 1992 - 272 str.
...Against the background of this essential interaction, the rest is merely effect: literature has become progressively more differentiated from the discourse...within its own space everything that will ensure a ludic denial of them . . . ; it breaks with the whole definition of genres . . . and becomes merely... | |
| Franklin E. Court - 1992 - 236 str.
...encounters the untamed, imperious being of words.... [I]n the nineteenth century ... literature . . . encloses itself within a radical intransitivity; it...within its own space everything that will ensure a ludic denial of them ... it breaks with the whole definition of genres as forms adapted to an order... | |
| Aníbal González - 1993 - 186 str.
...being of language. Against the background of this essential interaction, the rest is merely effect: literature becomes progressively more differentiated...within its own space everything that will ensure a ludic denial of them (the scandalous, the ugly, the impossible); it breaks with the whole def1nition... | |
| Eric Williams - 1993 - 372 str.
...upon the enigma of its own origin and existing wholly in reference to the pure act of writing. . . . Literature becomes progressively more differentiated...a radical intransitivity; it becomes detached from the values that were able to keep it in gen17. There is a growing consensus that the international... | |
| Robert Scott Leventhal - 1994 - 372 str.
...as an interpretative, historical object. Michel Foucault has analyzed this shift as follows: "[...] literature becomes progressively more differentiated...itself within a radical intransitivity [. . .] it breaks with the whole definition of genres as forms adapted to an order of representations, and becomes... | |
| Robert Scott Leventhal - 1994 - 302 str.
...to the naked power of speech, and there it encounters the untamed, imperious being of words. . . . [Literature becomes progressively more differentiated...within its own space everything that will ensure a ludic denial of them (the scandalous, the ugly, the impossible) ... it addresses itself to itself as... | |
| Raymond Tallis - 1998 - 236 str.
...Penguin, 1971), p. 7. 28 Roland Barthes, S/Z, trans. Richard Miller. (New York: Hill & Wang, 1974), p. 5. literature becomes progressively more differentiated...encloses itself within a radical intransitivity ... it breaks with the whole definition of genres and forms as adapted to an order of representation, and... | |
| Gerald L. Bruns - 2001 - 314 str.
...its diverse relationships with the world. Under the dominance of this new category, writing itself, "literature becomes progressively more differentiated...encloses itself within a radical intransitivity." It no longer serves the narration of hypothetical events or the expression of specialized forms of feeling;... | |
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