Understanding the Elements of Literature: Its Forms, Techniques and Cultural Conventions |
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Page 141
Lyrical prose and poetry . ... highly poetic and verse was held to be necessary to it as a mode of expression , but it was not until the Romantic period that the conception of verse drama as distinct from dramatic poetry was developed .
Lyrical prose and poetry . ... highly poetic and verse was held to be necessary to it as a mode of expression , but it was not until the Romantic period that the conception of verse drama as distinct from dramatic poetry was developed .
Page 154
forms of narrative poetry and it developed from the oral tradition of a pre - literate society . ... but it soon gave way to prose in the bourgeois comedies of the Restoration and was not revived until the early Romantic period when it ...
forms of narrative poetry and it developed from the oral tradition of a pre - literate society . ... but it soon gave way to prose in the bourgeois comedies of the Restoration and was not revived until the early Romantic period when it ...
Page 155
revived until the early Romantic period when it was used by poets such as Percy Bysshe Shelley and George Gordon Lord ... or prose which convince or move an audience by the unity and expressiveness of their poetic design or structure .
revived until the early Romantic period when it was used by poets such as Percy Bysshe Shelley and George Gordon Lord ... or prose which convince or move an audience by the unity and expressiveness of their poetic design or structure .
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Contents
The Nature of Literature and its Historical Tradition | 1 |
Narrative Fiction and the Printed Word | 39 |
Aesthetic Elements of Narrative Fiction | 48 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
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Understanding the Elements of Literature: Its Forms, Techniques and Cultural ... Richard Taylor No preview available - 1981 |
Common terms and phrases
action actual associations attitudes audience basic become character characteristics classical close combination common complete composition concern construction context contrast conventions course created culture depends developed devices direct drama effect elements emotional emphasise English especially example exists experience expression fact fiction figures force given gives hand historical human idea images imagination important individual interest kind language limited literary literature living look meaning merely method moral movement musical narrative narrator nature normal novel object original particular pattern period person phrases physical play plot poem poetry point of view possible present question reader reading recognise relation relationship represent rhyme rhythm scene sense sentence setting situation social society sound speech stage story stress structure style subject matter suggest takes techniques tenor theme tradition tragedy turn understanding units usually values vehicle verse writing written