Person, Place, and World: A Late-modern Reading of Robert FrostUniversity of Victoria, English Literary Studies, 2002 - 163 páginas Robert Frost's writing is continually solicited by the complexity and interrogative nature of perception itself and constitutes an extended and nuanced demonstration of the perceptual life and its discovery and exploration of the world. For this reason the concepts we find in phenomenology, and in particular in the work of Maurice Merleau-Ponty on the nature of perception and its broader ontological implications, are particularly relevant for understanding this body of poetry. |
Contenido
Introduction | 7 |
Introduction | 27 |
Chapter Two The Poetry of Education | 55 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
actual allow aspect attempt attention awareness balance beauty become begins body brings capacity certainly chapter character clear clearly comes complete concern consider context continually course create culture dark death definition desire detail direct dream effect encounter entirely example existence experience expression fact feel final forces fragility Frost fundamental further given gives human idea imagination important individual inherent kind landscape language less light limit lines look loss means merely metaphor mind moves nature never object once one's opening particular passage perception perhaps person physical piece play poem poet poetry possible present question reality realize reason recognize relation remains remarkable repetition seems seen sense significance situation social speaker speaks specific strange style suggestion things thought tion tone trees turn ultimate University vision voice whole writing