Ways of Reading: Advanced Reading Skills for Students of English LiteratureRoutledge, 24 ene 2007 - 384 páginas Ways of Readingis a well-established core textbook that provides the reader with the tools to analyze and interpret the meanings of literary and non-literary texts.
This third edition has been redesigned and updated throughout with many fresh examples and exercises, updated further reading suggestions and new material on electronic sources and the Internet, language and power, and drama. nternet, language and power, and drama. |
Índice
Introduction | 1 |
Basic techniques and problemsolving | 5 |
Language variation | 53 |
Attributing meaning | 115 |
Poetic form | 193 |
Narrative | 249 |
Media from text to performance | 293 |
notes on activities | 340 |
Glossary | 342 |
361 | |
367 | |
374 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
Ways of Reading: Advanced Reading Skills for Students of English Literature Martin Montgomery,Alan Durant,Nigel Fabb,Tom Furniss,Sara Mills Vista previa restringida - 2007 |
Ways of Reading: Advanced Reading Skills for Students of English Literature Martin Montgomery,Alan Durant,Nigel Fabb No hay ninguna vista previa disponible - 2007 |
Ways of Reading: Advanced Reading Skills for Students of English Literature Martin Montgomery,Alan Durant,Nigel Fabb,Tom Furniss No hay ninguna vista previa disponible - 2007 |
Términos y frases comunes
actors alliteration allusion analysis anapaestic archaism audience century characters communication context conventions Criticism cultural describe deviation dialect discourse dramatic irony dramatic text effect elements English example feminists fiction figurative language film focalization formal free indirect speech function genre grammar Haiku Iago iamb iambic iambic pentameter iambic trimeter images indirect speech instance interpretation Intertextuality involves juxtaposition kind linguistic literary texts literature London look male meaning metaphor metonymy metre narrative notion noun novel Othello parallelism particular performance person narration phrase play poem poetic poetry possible presented prose questions reader reading refer relation RENTON resurrection rhyme rhythm sense sentence sequence situational irony social song sonnet sound patterning speaker specific SPUD stanza stereotypical story stressed style syllables T.S. Eliot text’s things tion Trainspotting types typically verbal irony verse voice vowel W.K. Wimsatt women words writing written