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Frost's Synecdochism

American Literature, 1986
T HE reader of Frost can hardly help noticing a recurrent structural tendency in the nature lyrics: again and again, the poems move naturally from description of an object or scene or event to a commentary or meditation on its significance. This pattern may be perfectly obvious, as in "Design" (where it is also particularly appropriate to the subject ...
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Synecdoche and Stigma

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, 2007
In the portion of their reply directed to me, Professor Asch and Dr. Wasserman helpfully develop the synecdoche argument by highlighting its connections to stigma. I understand them to distinguish the situation of a woman making a decision concerning her pregnancy informed by prenatal testing from a woman making a similar decision informed by ...
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Sensation and Synecdoche

Canadian Journal of Philosophy, 1972
Sometimes in THE CONCEPT OF MIND Gilbert Ryle describes what he is up to in a way which is quite unhelpful. The following passage will serve as an example of what I mean:To talk of a person’s mind is not to talk of a repository which is permitted to house objects that something called ‘the physical world’ is forbidden to house; it is to talk of the ...
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Synecdoche, Articulation, and Abortion

Diacritics, 2023
Abstract: “Can the very essence of a political issue, an issue like say, abortion, hinge on the structure of a figure?” This essay reposes the question—first articulated by Barbara Johnson in 1986—and examines the function of synecdoche within contemporary abortion discourse in the U.S.
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On Synecdoche

Current Anthropology, 2022
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Synecdoche in Wordworth's "Michael"

ELH, 1965
If from the public way you turn your steps Up the tumultuous brook of Green-head Gill, You will suppose that with an upright path Your feet must struggle; in such bold ascent The pastoral Mountains front you, face to face. But courage! for beside that boisterous Brook The mountains have all open'd out themselves, And made a hidden valley of their own ...
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