In Defense of Historical Literature: Essays on American History, Autobiography, Drama, and Fiction |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 24
Page 29
... moreover , the book reveals a strong interest in the rele- vance of psychoanalysis to religious , economic , and other cultural problems in the Western society out of which psychoanalysis eventually developed . Mr. Erikson is interested ...
... moreover , the book reveals a strong interest in the rele- vance of psychoanalysis to religious , economic , and other cultural problems in the Western society out of which psychoanalysis eventually developed . Mr. Erikson is interested ...
Page 62
... pattern of events . It was the Puritan custom , moreover , to improve every opportunity to find moral instruction and signs of universal meaning in particular experience . Franklin himself de- scribes 62 IN DEFENSE OF HISTORICAL LITERATURE.
... pattern of events . It was the Puritan custom , moreover , to improve every opportunity to find moral instruction and signs of universal meaning in particular experience . Franklin himself de- scribes 62 IN DEFENSE OF HISTORICAL LITERATURE.
Page 136
... moreover , that lead Quentin and Shreve to the most important historical “ fact ” in the novel , 5 The italics are mine . the Negro ancestry of Charles Bon . Quentin and Shreve 136 IN DEFENSE OF HISTORICAL LITERATURE.
... moreover , that lead Quentin and Shreve to the most important historical “ fact ” in the novel , 5 The italics are mine . the Negro ancestry of Charles Bon . Quentin and Shreve 136 IN DEFENSE OF HISTORICAL LITERATURE.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accept achievement action actually admirable American appearance autobiography begin believe called cause century character child confess consider Cotton Mather course criticism Devil discussion effect England entire errors especially evidence examine example experience explain express fact Faith Fellow fiction figure force Franklin give Goodman Brown Hawthorne Hawthorne's Henry historians human important Increase individual interest interpretation John judgment kind language less literary literature meaning method Miller Miss moral moreover motives narrative narrator nature never notice novel past perception practice present problem Puritan qualities Quentin questions reader reason recognize relationship remains remarkable remember represent romance Rosa Salem says Scarlet Letter seems society statement story suggests Sutpen tells Thomas tion truth typical understand witch writing young