 |
Product Search
|
 |
 |
Article Search
|
 |
 |
Resources
|  |
|
Home > Literature We Have Found 41 Products for your search of Literature. Displaying Items Page 1 and Articles Page 1.
Brand
Author
Condition
    (0 votes) Why Books Will Never Go Out of Style K Fagan With so many other ways to get information these days, do we still need books? Old habits die hard, and are passed down from generations. If your parents read to you, the chances are you will read to you children and so on. Well that is an ideal world.
I think it comes from the educational side of life. If you have a good experience in school with books, then reading on after school years... products, articles
    (0 votes) Audio Books for a Courier Norman Dulwich For a courier on a long-distance job, it can be hard to keep alert and focused. While there are various methods of keeping yourself stimulated during a long drive, there is one that can not only help you pass the time, but will help you impress people with your literary knowledge at the same time. The answer? Listening to audio books. You don't even need to bring along a stack of de... products, articles
    (0 votes) Lewis Carroll's Alice books and their impact on other fantasy books and society. Eliza Wyatt Lewis Carroll’s Alice books are enshrined as a great literary achievement. The excitement around Tim Burton’s recent 3D film reminds me that this Victorian story has never gone out of fashion.
England is famous for children’s stories, and Charles Dodgson’s story created for Alice Liddell (at age 5 or 6) on an Oxford punt, is quintessentially so. It is also one of the rare Eng... products, articles
9. Linguistics and Literature
class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> class="minus2" style="display:none"> Introduction to Theory of Literature (ENGL 300)
In this lecture on the work of Roman Jakobson, Professor Paul Fry continues his discussion of synchrony and diachrony. The relationships among formalism, semiotics, and linguistics are explored. Claude Levi-Strauss's structural interpretation of the Oedipus myth is discussed in some detail. In order to differentiate Jakobson's poetic functions, Professor Fry analyzes the sentence "It is raining" from six perspectives. Significant attention is paid to the use of diagrams in literary linguistic theory.
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses
This course was recorded in Spring 2009.
|
|
| Please add your comments. |
| |
|