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- catalog alternative "Aldous Huxley and W.H. Auden".
- catalog alternative "On language".
- catalog contributor b10801465.
- catalog created "1998.".
- catalog date "1998".
- catalog date "1998.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1998.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 165-168) and index.".
- catalog description "pt. 1. The People -- The Imperfection of Language -- For Language, Intent Is Everything! -- Donner un Sens Plus Pur aux Mots de la Tribu -- The Telling -- Along with Language Came the Individual Ego -- The Human Being as Amphibian -- Words: Simple (Vulgar/Profane/Lowbrow) -- The Anonymous Public: Advertising/Propaganda -- The "Crowd" Mentality and the Public -- pt. 2. The Poet -- 1. Every poet begins at the beginning with the eyes of children ... a New Adam -- The Poet is a miner who excavates raw materials -- The Poet is seeking to understand his desires ... -- 2. With materials gathered, the poet sees, perceives, and tells, chasing wish-fulfillment -- The artist synthesizes inner and outer life ... -- 3. Man lives everyday life with language that is vulgar, lowbrow, and profane -- The Poet writes in order to confess as therapy and to share gossip that will win approval -- Once cleansed through confession, the Poet is inspired by sympathy, sincerity, and passion -- 4. The poet ... gives a purer sense to the vulgar, profane, and lowbrow words of the tribe ... -- 5. The purification of words helps the poet and his readers transcend the ineffable by intimating/recreating Awe-sociations -- Awe is a feeling akin to that of romantic love or the Vision of Eros -- The Awe derived from the Mystical Vision of Eros ... can evolve into Agape ... -- The Poet hopes that through his poetry he can communicate to his readers the therapeutic value he found for himself that can make us all more human -- The Poet teaches us how to be more human ... -- Poetic Parables ultimately ask of the Poet and his reader: Who am I? Whom ought I to become?".
- catalog extent "x, 174 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "Aldous Huxley & W.H. Auden.".
- catalog identifier "0933951809 (lib. bdg. : acid-free paper)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Aldous Huxley & W.H. Auden.".
- catalog isPartOf "Locust Hill literary studies ; no. 24.".
- catalog isPartOf "The Locust Hill literary studies series ; 24".
- catalog issued "1998".
- catalog issued "1998.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "West Cornwall, CT : Locust Hill Press,".
- catalog relation "Aldous Huxley & W.H. Auden.".
- catalog subject "820.9/00912 21".
- catalog subject "Auden, W. H. (Wystan Hugh), 1907-1973 Knowledge Language and languages.".
- catalog subject "English language 20th century Style.".
- catalog subject "Huxley, Aldous, 1894-1963 Knowledge Language and languages.".
- catalog subject "Language and languages in literature.".
- catalog subject "PR6015.U9 Z727 1998".
- catalog subject "Poetics History 20th century.".
- catalog subject "Poetics.".
- catalog tableOfContents "pt. 1. The People -- The Imperfection of Language -- For Language, Intent Is Everything! -- Donner un Sens Plus Pur aux Mots de la Tribu -- The Telling -- Along with Language Came the Individual Ego -- The Human Being as Amphibian -- Words: Simple (Vulgar/Profane/Lowbrow) -- The Anonymous Public: Advertising/Propaganda -- The "Crowd" Mentality and the Public -- pt. 2. The Poet -- 1. Every poet begins at the beginning with the eyes of children ... a New Adam -- The Poet is a miner who excavates raw materials -- The Poet is seeking to understand his desires ... -- 2. With materials gathered, the poet sees, perceives, and tells, chasing wish-fulfillment -- The artist synthesizes inner and outer life ... -- 3. Man lives everyday life with language that is vulgar, lowbrow, and profane -- The Poet writes in order to confess as therapy and to share gossip that will win approval -- Once cleansed through confession, the Poet is inspired by sympathy, sincerity, and passion -- 4. The poet ... gives a purer sense to the vulgar, profane, and lowbrow words of the tribe ... -- 5. The purification of words helps the poet and his readers transcend the ineffable by intimating/recreating Awe-sociations -- Awe is a feeling akin to that of romantic love or the Vision of Eros -- The Awe derived from the Mystical Vision of Eros ... can evolve into Agape ... -- The Poet hopes that through his poetry he can communicate to his readers the therapeutic value he found for himself that can make us all more human -- The Poet teaches us how to be more human ... -- Poetic Parables ultimately ask of the Poet and his reader: Who am I? Whom ought I to become?".
- catalog title "Aldous Huxley & W.H. Auden : on language / by David Garrett Izzo.".
- catalog title "Aldous Huxley and W.H. Auden".
- catalog title "On language".
- catalog type "History. fast".
- catalog type "text".