Radical Literary Education: A Classroom Experiment with Wordsworth's "Ode"University of Wisconsin Press, 1987 - 201 sider |
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Side 108
... innocence and freedom , a Heaven , which he often associates with childhood ; and just as the mourning of the dead hero preserves , in Max Horkheimer's phrase , " the uto- pia of eternal happiness , " the latter becomes a possession in ...
... innocence and freedom , a Heaven , which he often associates with childhood ; and just as the mourning of the dead hero preserves , in Max Horkheimer's phrase , " the uto- pia of eternal happiness , " the latter becomes a possession in ...
Side 126
... innocence ” does not produce alienation , but in " The Mad Monk " it does . The loss in " The Mad Monk " belongs to history and biogra- phy . In the “ Ode " it belongs to a theological paradigm : the loss of divine or divinely ...
... innocence ” does not produce alienation , but in " The Mad Monk " it does . The loss in " The Mad Monk " belongs to history and biogra- phy . In the “ Ode " it belongs to a theological paradigm : the loss of divine or divinely ...
Side 127
... Innocence and Experience in which songs of or about innocent childhood are illustrated with figures of sex- ual desire . Here , and on the frontispiece to The Book of Thel and on plate 3 of Visions of the Daughters of Albion , innocence ...
... Innocence and Experience in which songs of or about innocent childhood are illustrated with figures of sex- ual desire . Here , and on the frontispiece to The Book of Thel and on plate 3 of Visions of the Daughters of Albion , innocence ...
Innhold
The Instructors Autobiography | 22 |
A Message from Eternity | 35 |
Imitation and Development | 59 |
Opphavsrett | |
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activity adolescent answer appears asked associations authority beauty becomes begin called child childhood Coleridge comes consciousness consolation course critical defined desire early effect energy English Studies exists experience fact fantasy fear feel final force freedom genre give hand happiness Hazlitt heart hero hope human ideas idyllic imagination imitation important individual innocence language late light literary literature lives look loss meaning mind nature object once particular passion perhaps person pleasure poem poet poet's poetry political possibility present Press question reader reality refer relations rescue response revision seems sense sexual social society speak teacher things thinking thou thought tion tradition Trilling turns understanding University values vision voice wind wish Wordsworth Wordsworth's Ode writing York young