I can — worldliness, circumstantiality, the text's status as an event having sensuous particularity as well as historical contingency, are considered as being incorporated in the text, an infrangible part of its capacity for conveying and producing... Teaching Against the Grain: Texts for a Pedagogy of Possibilityav Roger Simon - 1992 - 172 siderIngen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - Om denne boken
| Jonathan Ngate - 1988 - 212 sider
...Text, and the Critic (1983). For me then, the texts in Part I and Part II represent significant forms in which worldliness, circumstantiality, the text's...as being incorporated in the text, an infrangible pan of its capacity for conveying and producing meaning. This means that a text has a specific situation,... | |
| Joseph P. Natoli - 1989 - 356 sider
...says, "is that it represents a considerably articulated thesis for dealing with a text as significant form, in which . . . worldliness, circumstantiality,...infrangible part of its capacity for conveying and producing meaning. This means that a text has a specific situation, placing restraints upon the interpreter and... | |
| Bernard Aresu - 1993 - 332 sider
...confluence with modern expressions of lyricism, it remains to be seen, exemplifies the kind of "significant form in which . . . worldliness, circumstantiality,...infrangible part of its capacity for conveying and producing meaning" (Said 1983: 39). That Kateb had discovered great affinities with Baudelaire's poetic temperament... | |
| Michael Clark - 2000 - 272 sider
...interpretation, for example, Edward Said says that its value lies in "dealing with a text as significant form, in which . . . worldliness, circumstantiality,...infrangible part of its capacity for conveying and producing meaning." That worldly particularity and contingency, Said concludes, "exist at the same level of surface... | |
| Paul A. Bové - 2000 - 334 sider
...instead to be open to, even actively seek out, the ways in which a text's "circumstantiality"— its "status as an event having sensuous particularity as well as historical contingency" — is "incorporated in the text, an infrangible part of its capacity for conveying and producing meaning."2... | |
| Francis Ngaboh-Smart - 2004 - 196 sider
...comprehensive norms." 10 Second, and more important, he assumes a tradition of novelistic discourse in which "the text's status as an event having sensuous particularity as well as historical contingency, [is] considered as being incorporated in the text, an infrangible part of its capacity for conveying... | |
| Julia Emberley - 2007 - 345 sider
...location both in terms of its 'sensuous particularity' and its 'historical contingency,' and that both 'are considered as being incorporated in the text,...infrangible part of its capacity for conveying and producing meaning' (Said 1983: 39). The notion of worldliness enabled Said to situate canonical texts, such as... | |
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