The Sewanee Review, Volume 52T. Hodgson, 1944 - American fiction |
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Page 212
... novel has at no time enjoyed anything like the number and the intensity of objective conventions which the drama , even in its comparatively formless periods , has offered to the critic . The number of techniques possible in the novel ...
... novel has at no time enjoyed anything like the number and the intensity of objective conventions which the drama , even in its comparatively formless periods , has offered to the critic . The number of techniques possible in the novel ...
Page 216
... novel had to accomplish the task that in Europe had been done by primitive chronicle , mémoir , ballad , strolling player . The American novel has had to find a new experience , and only in our time has it been able to pause for the ...
... novel had to accomplish the task that in Europe had been done by primitive chronicle , mémoir , ballad , strolling player . The American novel has had to find a new experience , and only in our time has it been able to pause for the ...
Page 308
... novel as de- liberately heretical , but in doing so Mr. Braswell passes over cer- tain chapters which might embarrass his thesis . The key sen- tence of the novel ( if one may be so temerous as to try to epitomize it ) is found , I ...
... novel as de- liberately heretical , but in doing so Mr. Braswell passes over cer- tain chapters which might embarrass his thesis . The key sen- tence of the novel ( if one may be so temerous as to try to epitomize it ) is found , I ...
Contents
The Necessity For Spiritual Revival Theodore M Greene | 14 |
Albert Taylor Bledsoe R M Weaver | 24 |
Albert Taylor Bledsoe | 34 |
Copyright | |
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