The Jew in the Victorian Novel: Some Relationships Between Prejudice and ArtAMS Press, 1980 - 238 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-3 av 33
Side 11
... function , or achievement . Be- cause the prejudice that exists in art functions within an artis- tic structure , and is intended to serve that structure in the ways that the author has determined , prejudice is only rarely found to be ...
... function , or achievement . Be- cause the prejudice that exists in art functions within an artis- tic structure , and is intended to serve that structure in the ways that the author has determined , prejudice is only rarely found to be ...
Side 37
... function preceded and deter- mined his economic specialization , and it is the composite image . resulting from these two functions which continued to single him out as a Jew within the new bourgeois society . . . . That is why a ...
... function preceded and deter- mined his economic specialization , and it is the composite image . resulting from these two functions which continued to single him out as a Jew within the new bourgeois society . . . . That is why a ...
Side 89
... function in art , and secondly , to recognize the diversity that exists among Dickens's imaginative conceptions ... functions . In contrast , although there are no lengthy digressions about Jews in Our Mutual Friend as there are in ...
... function in art , and secondly , to recognize the diversity that exists among Dickens's imaginative conceptions ... functions . In contrast , although there are no lengthy digressions about Jews in Our Mutual Friend as there are in ...
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
achieve actions actually appearance artistic aspects associated attitude aware beauty becomes Books cause certainly chap characterization Christian Cohens complex concerned Consequently considered contrast create criminal criticism Deronda described Dickens Dickens's Disraeli effect elements Emilius encourages England English evident evil example experience eyes face fact Fagin father feels foreign function further George Eliot hand History human individual Isaac Jewess Jewish characters Lady literature live Lizzie London look Lopez Madame Goesler manner means Melmotte Mirah moral Mordecai murder nature negative never novel occurs one's passage personality physical plot portrait position prejudice prejudiced present qualities race reader Rebecca references regard religion religious result Riah role Scott seems serves similar social society stereotypes story structure suggests sympathy techniques tion traits Trollope Trollope's turn types understanding values Victorian woman York
Referanser til denne boken
Crime, Gender, and Consumer Culture in Nineteenth-century England Tammy C. Whitlock Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2005 |
Reading Adaptations: Novels and Verse Narratives on the Stage, 1790-1840 Philip Cox Begrenset visning - 2000 |