SwiftHarvester Press, 1986 - 153 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 6
... individual's conscious freedoms as ' freedoms ' indeed . Lastly , and most significantly for this reading of Swift , Foucault was careful to state that the ' author ' cannot ' refer purely and simply to a real individual , since it can ...
... individual's conscious freedoms as ' freedoms ' indeed . Lastly , and most significantly for this reading of Swift , Foucault was careful to state that the ' author ' cannot ' refer purely and simply to a real individual , since it can ...
Page 69
... individual gained an identity from many perhaps heterogeneous influences . In psychological studies after John Locke's Essay , experience was disturbingly paramount in the formation of character . Man acquires knowledge initially from ...
... individual gained an identity from many perhaps heterogeneous influences . In psychological studies after John Locke's Essay , experience was disturbingly paramount in the formation of character . Man acquires knowledge initially from ...
Page 113
... individual writer . Swift , by becoming something he is not in assuming the mantle of the Drapier , is actually transcending the particular and the biased . Even when wielding a pen for the defence of liberty , that most ideal and ...
... individual writer . Swift , by becoming something he is not in assuming the mantle of the Drapier , is actually transcending the particular and the biased . Even when wielding a pen for the defence of liberty , that most ideal and ...
Common terms and phrases
abstract alien Anglican appears Argument attempt behaviour Bickerstaff Book Brobdingnag Brobdingnagian character coherence common confronted context critical Crusoe Dampier Defoe Defoe's deny discourse Drapier Drapier's Letters edition effect Ehrenpreis Eighteenth-Century England English especially Essay ethical experience expressed fictional George Berkeley Gulliver Gulliver's Travels Houynhynms human identify ideology individual inhumane intention interpretation Ireland Irish Tracts irony Jonathan Swift judgement Kingdom of Ireland Lagadian language Lilliputians linguistic literary Locke's London Madness mankind material meaning metaphor mimetic Modern Modest Proposal Moll Flanders moral narrative natural Number objects observed one's paradox particular Partridge perspective plain political Pope primary qualities Projector radical rational reader reading Reason recognise rhetorical satire Scriblerians sense signifying social South Sea Bubble style Swift's text Swift's writing Tale Teller textual Theophrastus thought truth University voyage Whig Whiggism whilst William Wood's patent words Yahoos