Knowledge and Survival in the Novels of Thomas HardyLund University, 2002 - 423 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 57
Página 66
... culture offered in them being really good and sound , and the best that our time knows . By public establishment they may communicate to those reared in them the sense of being brought in contact with their country , with the national ...
... culture offered in them being really good and sound , and the best that our time knows . By public establishment they may communicate to those reared in them the sense of being brought in contact with their country , with the national ...
Página 267
... Culture and Anarchy.277 The ques- tion for both Hardy and Arnold is how modern man is to choose between these two contradictory views of life . The term ' imaginative reason ' , coined by Arnold and offered on the final page of A ...
... Culture and Anarchy.277 The ques- tion for both Hardy and Arnold is how modern man is to choose between these two contradictory views of life . The term ' imaginative reason ' , coined by Arnold and offered on the final page of A ...
Página 393
... Culture ( London and Beverly Hills : Sage Publications , 1977 ) . First published as La Réproduction in 1970 ... Cultural Production . Essays on Art and Literature ( Cambridge : Polity , 1993 ) . Bourdieu , Pierre , ' The Forms of ...
... Culture ( London and Beverly Hills : Sage Publications , 1977 ) . First published as La Réproduction in 1970 ... Cultural Production . Essays on Art and Literature ( Cambridge : Polity , 1993 ) . Bourdieu , Pierre , ' The Forms of ...
Contenido
Contents | 9 |
Work as a metaphor for knowledge | 15 |
Hardy and dialect | 26 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 31 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
ability able appears attendance become believed Cambridge Chapter characters clearly County Critical described discussion Dorset early effect England English Essays example existence experience expressed fact feelings fiction future hand Hardy's Hardy's novels History human ideas important individual influence intellectual interest John Jude Jude the Obscure kind knowledge labourers lack language later learning less limited Literary lives London major means nature needs nineteenth century novel origins Oxford particularly past period position practical present Press progress published Quoted reader reading reason recognise reflected regarded relation relationship result Return Review rural rustics scientific shows situation social society story success suggests teachers teaching Tess Thomas Hardy thought tion traditional understanding University Victorian village writing young