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Journal of Asian American Studies, 2014
A product of the revival of classical Greek and Roman culture known as humanism, Renaissance literary criticism took root in defenses of poetry and dialogues on language and literary imitation in Italy in the 14th and 15th centuries. It reached maturity, however, and first achieved independence as a discourse in 16th-century Italy, where the recovery ...
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A product of the revival of classical Greek and Roman culture known as humanism, Renaissance literary criticism took root in defenses of poetry and dialogues on language and literary imitation in Italy in the 14th and 15th centuries. It reached maturity, however, and first achieved independence as a discourse in 16th-century Italy, where the recovery ...
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2011
The chapter surveys Johnson's prefaces and essays, discusses his comparative criticism, his conception of the sublime, his prose treatises, responses to his criticism and his critical heirs and ...
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The chapter surveys Johnson's prefaces and essays, discusses his comparative criticism, his conception of the sublime, his prose treatises, responses to his criticism and his critical heirs and ...
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2012
Abstract This article is about the Transcendentalist critics and their style of criticism. Though there were various opinions on how a literary work should be formed, Transcendentalists thought neither creation nor reading should take place in solitude; they constantly evaluated the factors that shaped creativity and critical awareness ...
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Abstract This article is about the Transcendentalist critics and their style of criticism. Though there were various opinions on how a literary work should be formed, Transcendentalists thought neither creation nor reading should take place in solitude; they constantly evaluated the factors that shaped creativity and critical awareness ...
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Abstract This chapter begins by examining William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s Lyrical Ballads, a collection which, though radical, could hardly have been classed as a full-frontal attack on the Establishment, but one which still looked a bit too interested in undermining convention.
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