10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «NOVELISTICALLY» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
novelistically in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
novelistically im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
Loopholes: Reading Comically
Just why this is—just why Pickwick has been called upon to satisfy the need to
read novelistically, rather than to inspire in readers other equally shrewd and
creative fictional devices—is the subject of this chapter. Pickwick is a book that ...
2
The Cambridge Companion to Dostoevskii
... medical mentors, but also to the insights of Dostoevskii, probably without
realising that they had the same intellectual underpinnings. The psychological
novel Dostoevskii's intellect operated novelistically far better than it did
systematically.
W. J. Leatherbarrow, 2002
3
How Novels Think: The Limits of Individualism from 1719-1900
WHAT WOMEN LACK Until the 1980s, when feminism emerged as a major force
in novel studies, scholars and critics by and large read novels novelistically. By
reading novelistically, I mean that one identifies a lack in the protagonist that he ...
4
Bazin at Work: Major Essays and Reviews From the Forties and ...
®novelistically ̄¦realized. The last third, by contrast, stresses the love
affairbetween Dux andBarryand attimes barely manages toavoida farcicaltone.
Here perhaps the screenwriter ranoutof energy and audacity. However, no
matterhow ...
Andre Bazin, Bert Cardullo, 2014
NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY San Francisco Chronicle • Newsweek/The Daily Beast • The Seattle Times • The Economist • Kansas City Star • BookPage On February 14, 1989, Valentine’s Day, Salman Rushdie was telephoned ...
6
The Prose of Things: Transformations of Description in the ...
Although history writing would, for the most part, continue to ignore Macaulay's
call for the spatially intimate, the circumstantially minute, the novelistically
constructed, history nevertheless found itself spatially, circumstantially, and
novelistically ...
7
Conversations with Gloria Naylor
As a reader, twelve years old, thirteen years old, you know, I was reading those
things from cover to cover. And to me they spoke novelistically. CR: What do you
mean when you say "novelistically"? GN: Charles H. Rowell / 1997 153.
Maxine Lavon Montgomery, 2004
8
Intimate Conflict: Contradiction in Literary and ...
ways. Economically, they are to be regarded as symptoms which provide a
substitute or replacement satisfaction for the unconscious. That is, they stand for,
or stand in for, other more deeply repressed (we might novelistically say “more
deeply ...
9
Journal of Narrative Theory: JNT.
Just why this is — just why Pickwick has been called upon to satisfy the need to
read novelistically, rather than to inspire in readers other equally shrewd and
creative fictional devices — is the subject of this essay. Pickwick is a book that ...
10
Bring Up the Bodies: A Novel
Winner of the 2012 Man Booker Prize Winner of the 2012 Costa Book of the Year Award The sequel to Hilary Mantel's 2009 Man Booker Prize winner and New York Times bestseller, Wolf Hall delves into the heart of Tudor history with the downfall ...
10 NACHRICHTEN, IN DENEN DER BEGRIFF «NOVELISTICALLY» VORKOMMT
Erfahre, worüber man in den einheimischen und internationalen Medien spricht und wie der Begriff
novelistically im Kontext der folgenden Nachrichten gebraucht wird.
Harper Lee's Go Set a Watchman draws hype and controversy
It was a brilliant decision novelistically," said Hill, who will also be reviewing the book. Bahram Olfati, the senior vice-president for print at Indigo ... «CBC.ca, Jul 15»
Colm Toibin finds shared losses with poet Elizabeth Bishop
Toibin identifies this as childhood loss of parents, and Bishop's subsequent dislocations. He describes poems novelistically, almost mimicking ... «Sydney Morning Herald, Jun 15»
Comedy: Content is king and these days everyone can play, actors say
You can write almost novelistically now because audiences are binging rather than watching one at a time. It's almost like reading chapters. «Los Angeles Times, Jun 15»
How Would 'Ulysses' Be Received Today?
The rules have so changed — and our notion of what is novelistically possible so expanded — that if “Ulysses” were to come along now, with ... «New York Times, Jun 15»
Joseph Mitchell of the New Yorker: The man behind the myth
... which was then little more than glorified newspaper writing, Mitchell instead tended to unspool them novelistically, often ending up in a place ... «Toronto Star, Mai 15»
'I wish this guy hadn't written this book'
Mitchell would recast sentences dozens of times, then use scissors to cut and arrange them. The assembled whole, Kunkel writes, would unspool “novelistically, ... «Columbia Journalism Review, Apr 15»
On Stagecraft
... Hollywood, you are unlikely to be surprised that Thomson attacks the subject of acting sometimes discursively and sometimes novelistically. «The Weekly Standard, Mär 15»
Review: 'Battle Creek' is the buddy-cop show we don't know if we want
... out and no apologies. Where True Detective concealed its cliches inside a novelistically-constructed, artful, dark-and-brooding exercise in ... «Lightly Buzzed, Mär 15»
celebrating 200 years of Pride and Prejudice (1813)
... that Elizabeth can only be congratulated for immediately recognising how novelistically grave her sister's condition might turn out to be. «Open Democracy, Feb 15»
Nobel laureate Turkısh writer's new novel reverses the gaze of the …
... material for an ambitious novel about Istanbul's changing realities: instead of dismissing or adoring them, Pamuk looks at them novelistically. «Daily Sabah, Dez 14»