SwiftHarvester Press, 1986 - 153 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 3
... meaning as an effect of the words on the page rather than their writer's intention . These ' words ' should claim the critic's attention rather than their writer or our own perceptions in reading them , for , in the face of linguistic ...
... meaning as an effect of the words on the page rather than their writer's intention . These ' words ' should claim the critic's attention rather than their writer or our own perceptions in reading them , for , in the face of linguistic ...
Page 115
... meaning by appealing to a consensus . It is precisely because of their lack of a spontaneous morality and knowledge of their own interest , that the Irish people need such written cordials . When interpreting the words ' Voluntary ' and ...
... meaning by appealing to a consensus . It is precisely because of their lack of a spontaneous morality and knowledge of their own interest , that the Irish people need such written cordials . When interpreting the words ' Voluntary ' and ...
Page 127
... meaning ' , ' author ' and ' reader ' are most unstable referents . Ehrenpreis believes that ' only as a relationship between a real speaker and a real listener can meaning exist ' ( p . 60 ) . Such meaning is conceived only as stable ...
... meaning ' , ' author ' and ' reader ' are most unstable referents . Ehrenpreis believes that ' only as a relationship between a real speaker and a real listener can meaning exist ' ( p . 60 ) . Such meaning is conceived only as stable ...
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