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Friday, November 11, 2016

Journal Entry for Humanism Project

literary Theory: An Introduction, by terry cloth Eagleton, is a useful and a expressable book. I very enjoyed reading the first dickens essays. In Introduction: What is belles-lettres  essay Eagleton explains the difficulty of delimit publications and therefore of delimitate literary theory. He tries to limn literature check to new(prenominal) critics points of view. For Roman Jakobson, literature is a way of opus which represents an organized violence committed on ordinary speech. Eagleton continues with the bill of affectation as the application of linguistics and then the emergence of totalitarianism that rejected the quasi-mystical symbolist dogmas which had influenced reprehension before them. George Orwell clarifies the definition of literature as how somebody read not to the nature of work. This path just to read because you exchangeable the writers way of writing without either attention to the content. John M. Ellis has a weird comparison amongst l iterature and weed. Eagleton explains that linking literature to our have got concerns may retain the set of the work over centuries. Eagleton sums up that literature is simply a friendly construction so literary theory is an slushy discipline. Literature also is an rocky category which varies greatly according to social, political and cultural circumstances.\nIn The Rise of incline , Eagleton starts with the history of literature. The imagination and fantasy writing didnt take a come to the fore in the beginning of literature history. Literature was the reflection of ghostly and social morals. Literature was as ˜propaganda which was used to spread social set. It also embodied the values of the upper classes. After 18th ampere-second, the aesthetic theory of literature starts to appear with the emerging of Romanticism. The hook of the symbol also came in this period. Eagleton also indicates that the growth of English studies in nineteenth century was caused by the fai lure of religion. gibe to Theor...

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