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This is a systematic study of the conceptual framework used by critics and scholars in their discussions of influence in art and literature. Göran Hermerén explores the key questions raised in scholarly debate on the topic: What is meant by "influence"? What methods can be used to settle disagreements about influence? What reasons could be used to support or reject statements about artistic and literary influence? The book is based on descriptive analyses in which the author has tried to make explicit what is said or implied in a number of "ations from scholarly writings on art and literature. Throughout, the emphasis is on clarifying the assumptions on which the use of the concept of influence is based, thus describing the limitations and merits of this kind of comparative research for critics and scholars.Originally published in 1975.The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
Judgment (Aesthetics) --- Influence littéraire, artistique, etc. --- Jugement (Esthétique) --- Influence (Literary, artistic, etc) --- -Themes, motives. --- Judgment (Aesthetics). --- Influence littéraire, artistique, etc. --- Jugement (Esthétique) --- Art --- Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.) --- Literature --- -Artistic impact --- Artistic influence --- Impact (Literary, artistic, etc.) --- Literary impact --- Literary influence --- Literary tradition --- Tradition (Literature) --- Belles-lettres --- Western literature (Western countries) --- World literature --- Themes, motives. --- Philosophy --- Subjects --- Comparative literature --- Littérature --- Themes, motives --- Thèmes, motifs --- Philosophie --- Aesthetics --- Artistic impact --- Influence (Psychology) --- Intermediality --- Intertextuality --- Originality in literature --- Literature and philosophy --- Philosophy and literature --- Theory --- Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.). --- Philosophy. --- Art - Themes, motives --- Literature - Philosophy --- Adjective. --- Aesthetic Theory. --- Aesthetics. --- Allegory. --- Allusion. --- Anachronism. --- Ancient art. --- Anecdote. --- Antithesis. --- Art criticism. --- Art history. --- Artistic merit. --- Baroque painting. --- Caravaggio. --- Carolingian art. --- Causality. --- Cliché. --- Clinamen. --- Close reading. --- Comparative literature. --- Comparative method (linguistics). --- Contemporary art. --- Contemporary philosophy. --- Counterfactual conditional. --- Criticism. --- Cubism. --- D. H. Lawrence. --- Deed. --- Digression. --- Drapery. --- Engraving. --- Epic poetry. --- Explanation. --- Ezra Pound. --- Fine art. --- Florentine painting. --- Forgery. --- French literature. --- Genre. --- Human Action. --- Humanities. --- Iconography. --- Ideogrammic method. --- Ideology. --- Illocutionary act. --- Illusionism (art). --- Illustration. --- Illustrator. --- Imagery. --- Indian aesthetics. --- Individualism. --- Invention. --- Japanese art. --- Journalism. --- Languages of Art. --- Las Meninas. --- Literary genre. --- Literature. --- Marcel Duchamp. --- Metaphor. --- Monograph. --- Mural. --- Mutatis mutandis. --- Narrative. --- Oil sketch. --- Ontology. --- Originality. --- Overreaction. --- Pablo Picasso. --- Paul Gauguin. --- Perlocutionary act. --- Philosopher. --- Philosophy of history. --- Philosophy of language. --- Plagiarism. --- Poetry. --- Publication. --- Publishing. --- Rapprochement. --- Requirement. --- Result. --- Romanticism. --- Secondary source. --- Speech act. --- Still life. --- Stipulation. --- Stipulative definition. --- Suggestion. --- Symbolism (arts). --- The Conceptual Framework. --- Theory of art. --- Theory. --- Thought. --- Titian. --- Treatise. --- Value judgment. --- Visual arts. --- Work of art. --- Writer. --- Writing.
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Virtue, as used here, connotes integrity--that living force that issues from persons, societies, or texts in consequence of their accomplishing their distinctive ends. Professor Berthoff outlines the descent of the intuition of virtue from classical times into our own era and examines it as a formative presence in a series of major literary works.Originally published in 1987.The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
Virtue in literature. --- Ethics in literature. --- Literature --- Didactic literature --- Literature and philosophy --- Philosophy and literature --- Philosophy. --- History and criticism --- Theory, etc. --- Theory --- Ad hominem. --- After Virtue. --- Allegory. --- Analogy. --- Anecdote. --- Antithesis. --- Apologue. --- Assonance. --- Bildungsroman. --- Chivalric romance. --- Consummation. --- Contingency (philosophy). --- Courtly love. --- Criticism. --- D. H. Lawrence. --- Dictionnaire philosophique. --- Eloquence. --- Epigram. --- Epigraph (literature). --- Fabliau. --- Fiction. --- Figure of speech. --- Fine art. --- Flattery. --- Form of life (philosophy). --- Fortinbras. --- French moralists. --- G. (novel). --- Grandiosity. --- Hedonism. --- Hermeticism. --- Heroic couplet. --- Heroic drama. --- Heroic verse. --- Historicism. --- Idealization. --- Indulgence. --- Intentionality. --- Internal rhyme. --- Irony. --- Irving Babbitt. --- Italo Svevo. --- Karl Kraus (writer). --- Libertine. --- Literary nonsense. --- Literature. --- Memoir. --- Modernism. --- Mutability (poem). --- Narcissism. --- Narrative. --- Negative capability. --- Novel. --- Novelist. --- Of Education. --- On Truth. --- Opportunism. --- Originality. --- Phrenology. --- Poetry. --- Polonius. --- Positivism. --- Pragmatism. --- Precaution (novel). --- Pride. --- Prose. --- Proverb. --- Quixotism. --- Robert Musil. --- Romanticism. --- Rosicrucianism. --- Satire. --- Scholasticism. --- Self-Reliance. --- Sensibility. --- Soliloquy. --- Solipsism. --- Stendhal. --- Superiority (short story). --- Symbolism (arts). --- Synecdoche. --- Søren Kierkegaard. --- The Book of Thel. --- The Charterhouse of Parma. --- The Counterfeiters (novel). --- The Man Without Qualities. --- The Philosopher. --- The Sacred Fount. --- Theodore Dreiser. --- Theory of Forms. --- Truism. --- Ulrich. --- V. --- Verbosity. --- Vocation (poem). --- W. B. Yeats. --- What Is Literature?. --- William Shakespeare. --- Writing.
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