What is literature?/ Jean Paul Sarte.
By: Sarte, Jean Paul.
Material type: BookPublisher: New York: Harper Colophon Books, 1965Description: 297 p.; 22 cm.Subject(s): Literature -- PhilosophyDDC classification: 801 Summary: "Yet another remark,also bearing on Christian tragedies might be made about the conversion of Clorinda. Convinced though we may be of the immediate operations of grace, yet they can please us little on the stage, where everything that has to do with the character of the personages must arise from natural causes. We can only tolerate miracles in the physical world; in the moral everything must retain its natural course, because the theatre is to be the school of the moral world. The motives for every resolve, for every change of opinion or even thoughts, must be carefully balanced against each other so as to be in accordance with the hypothetical character, and must never produce more than they could produce in accordance with strict probability. The poet, by beauty of details, may possess the art of deluding us to overlook misproportions of this kind, but he only deceives us once and as soon as we are cool again we take back the applause he has lured from us"-- Provided by publisher.Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Books | Shelf No. 17 | Non-fiction | 801 SAW 1965 (Browse shelf) | Not For Loan (Restricted Access) | 006999 |
Browsing Gyantapas Abdur Razzaq Bidyapeeth Shelves , Shelving location: Shelf No. 17 , Collection code: Non-fiction Close shelf browser
Includes index.
"Yet another remark,also bearing on Christian tragedies might be made about the conversion of Clorinda. Convinced though we may be of the immediate operations of grace, yet they can please us little on the stage, where everything that has to do with the character of the personages must arise from natural causes. We can only tolerate miracles in the physical world; in the moral everything must retain its natural course, because the theatre is to be the school of the moral world. The motives for every resolve, for every change of opinion or even thoughts, must be carefully balanced against each other so as to be in accordance with the hypothetical character, and must never produce more than they could produce in accordance with strict probability. The poet, by beauty of details, may possess the art of deluding us to overlook misproportions of this kind, but he only deceives us once and as soon as we are cool again we take back the applause he has lured from us"-- Provided by publisher.
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