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Literary Science as a Science of Argument
New Literary History, 1976lying a literary science converges, in my view, from the most diverse angles upon a point which will be briefly explained in what follows: upon the question, that is, of what a statement, essay, or book in literary science would have to look like in order to earn the title scientific. Now as we know, there is anything but a consensus among contemporary
Siegfried J. Schmidt, Peter Heath
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Science and Literary Criticism
Nature, 1950Science and Literary Criticism By Prof. Herbert Dingle. Pp. viii + 184. (London and Edinburgh: Thomas Nelson and Sons, Ltd., 1949.) 7s. 6d. net.
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University of Toronto Quarterly, 1943
The struggle between science and literary criticism goes on, and with the years the issue becomes more muddled rather than clearer. The antagonism that many writers manifest towards the conclusions of science should neither surprise nor discourage us; psychic inertia is a datum, a force, that must constantly be reckoned with in all realms of thought ...
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The struggle between science and literary criticism goes on, and with the years the issue becomes more muddled rather than clearer. The antagonism that many writers manifest towards the conclusions of science should neither surprise nor discourage us; psychic inertia is a datum, a force, that must constantly be reckoned with in all realms of thought ...
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Making a science of literary criticism
Endeavour, 2007Since the emergence of "literary criticism" as a university subject in the 1880s, there have been those prepared to challenge its disciplinary status. How can something as subjective as literature be taught, let alone examined? Throughout the 20th century, the success of the sciences fostered methodological anxieties, resulting in several efforts from ...
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Science and Literary Criticism
Archives of Internal Medicine, 1962Among the scientists of our time Herbert Dingle is a notable exception. He has made a searching analysis of criticism and its function in science. In a series of scholarly articles, addresses, and books he has built up a substantial body of critical material on criticism.
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Network Science and Literary History
Leonardo, 2013This paper introduces a method for applying network analysis to the sociological study of literary history. Focusing on “little magazines” and poetry journals in the U.S., Japan, and China, the authors utilize bibliographic records to construct weighted, bipartite graphs of poets and journals linked by publication.
Hoyt Long, Richard So
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LITERARY SEMANTICS AS A SCIENCE
jlse, 1996La semantique litteraire est l'etude d'un texte comme evenement de l'histoire et tente de reconstruire la signification du texte a travers la recherche historique. Dans cet article, l'A. resitue les composants theoriques et empiriques de la science tels qu'ils sont realises dans la semantique litteraire. Il developpe ainsi une definition de la modalite
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Evolution, Literary History and Science Fiction
2008THE FIRST LINE OF the Preface of George Levine's study of Darwinian discourse and its connection to the nineteenth-century novel, Darwin Among The Novelists (1988) quotes G. H. Lewes's remark ‘that “science is penetrating everywhere” ‘ (Levine 1988, vii).
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International Journal of Research and Innovation in Applied Science
Rain has always been likened to benevolence by poets across all ages. Everyone recognises that rain is the fundamental source that sustains all living beings in this world. This is precisely why poets have metaphorically compared rain to charity.
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Rain has always been likened to benevolence by poets across all ages. Everyone recognises that rain is the fundamental source that sustains all living beings in this world. This is precisely why poets have metaphorically compared rain to charity.
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