Twentieth-century American Literature, 6. köideChelsea House Publishers, 1985 |
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Page 3444
... moral universe of imaginatively perceived , analogic forms . For this reason , said Malamud , the job of the writer ( especially the Jewish writer , for whom moral law has traditionally been palpable and real ) is to portray " more than ...
... moral universe of imaginatively perceived , analogic forms . For this reason , said Malamud , the job of the writer ( especially the Jewish writer , for whom moral law has traditionally been palpable and real ) is to portray " more than ...
Page 3445
... moral attention forever . " Just as it is his need for moral conviction that makes it impossible for Fitzgerald's protagonist to function in a kaleidoscope of random appetite and distorted gesture , so too are Roth's protagonists ...
... moral attention forever . " Just as it is his need for moral conviction that makes it impossible for Fitzgerald's protagonist to function in a kaleidoscope of random appetite and distorted gesture , so too are Roth's protagonists ...
Page 3686
... moral implications are not often so clearly delineated as they are in The Magician of Lublin , where the grotesque is almost invariably used to suggest a sense of evil - the evil inherent in the world and the evil inherent in freedom ...
... moral implications are not often so clearly delineated as they are in The Magician of Lublin , where the grotesque is almost invariably used to suggest a sense of evil - the evil inherent in the world and the evil inherent in freedom ...
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American appears artist become begins believe body called Carl Sandburg characters close collection comes concerned continued course critics culture dead death described dream early effect existence experience face fact father feeling fiction final force give hand human idea imagination important individual interest kind language later less light lines literary literature live look meaning mind Miss moral move nature never novel once past perhaps play poems poet poetry possible present published Pynchon reader reality reason relation Roethke Roth Salinger scene seems sense simply social society spirit story suggests symbol tell things thought tradition true trying turn University vision whole woman women writing written wrote York young