"All families and genera" : exploring the Corpus of English life sciences texts / / edited by Isabel Moskowich, Inés Lareo, Gonzalo Camiña |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , [2021] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (328 pages) |
Disciplina | 410.188 |
Soggetto topico |
English literature - 18th century - History and criticism
English literature - 19th century - History and criticism Life sciences - Great Britain - History - 18th century Life sciences - Great Britain - History - 19th century Life sciences literature - Great Britain - History and criticism |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Intro -- "All families and genera" -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Table of contents -- About this book -- Explorations of life sciences writing (1700-1900): A Preface -- List of contributors -- Chapter 1. The making of the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts (CELiST), a bunch of disciplines -- 1. Introduction: Biology or something else? -- 2. The structure of CELiST -- 3. The authors in CELiST -- 3.1 The sex of the authors -- 3.2 Geography -- 4. The texts in CELiST -- 4.1 The genres in CELiST -- Works cited -- Chapter 2. Editorial policy in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts: Criteria, conventions, encoding and editorial marks -- 1. General remarks -- 1.1 Headers -- 1.2 Fonts -- 1.3 Page numbers -- 1.4 Chapter and section titles -- 1.5 Paragraphs and lines -- 1.6 Analysable items -- 1.7 Omissions and amendments -- 2. Mark-up language -- 2.1 Tags in CELiST -- 3. Editorial marks and decisions -- 3.1 Pages -- 3.2 Lines and paragraphs -- 3.3 Words -- 4. List of editorial marks used in CELiST -- 5. Concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter 3. A look beyond the texts: The samples in the eighteenth-century Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The eighteenth-century samples in CELiST -- 1707. James Douglas, M. D. -- 1707. Sir Hans Sloane -- 1717. James Keill -- 1720. William Gibson -- 1723. Patrick Blair -- 1730. Thomas Boreman -- 1737. Elizabeth Blackwell -- 1737. John Brickell M. D. -- 1743. George Edwards -- 1750. Griffith Hughes -- 1752. James Solas Dodd -- 1758. William Borlase -- 1766. Thomas Pennant -- 1769. Edward Bancroft -- 1774. Oliver Goldsmith -- 1774. William Withering -- 1786. William Speechly -- 1789. James Bolton -- 1794. Edward Donovan -- 1795. Sir James Edward Smith -- 3. A note on the Appendix -- Acknowledgements -- Works cited.
Chapter 4. A look beyond the texts: The samples in the nineteenth-century Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Description of the nineteenth-century life sciences texts -- 1804. Maria Elizabetha Jacson -- 1808. Alexander Wilson -- 1816. Priscilla Wakefield -- 1819. Sir William Lawrence -- 1824. Edward Jenner -- 1828. John Davidson Godman -- 1832. Almira Hart Lincoln (Phelps) -- 1835. Sir William Jardine -- 1840. Anne Pratt -- 1848. Sir John Graham Dalyell -- 1859. Elizabeth (Cabot Cary) Agassiz -- 1859. Charles Robert Darwin -- 1863. Thomas Henry Huxley -- 1867. Herbert Spencer -- 1876. Alexander Macallister -- 1879. Phebe Lankester -- 1880. Francis Maitland Balfour -- 1889. Sir Francis Galton -- 1895. Emily Lovira Gregory -- 1898. Alpheus Spring Packard -- Works cited -- Chapter 5. The Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts and representativeness: An information and documentation analysis of Late Modern English scientific Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The corpus and representativeness -- 3. Methodology -- 4. Findings and discussion -- Qualitative representativeness -- Quantitative representativeness -- 5. Concluding remarks -- Works cited -- Chapter 6. Lexical fixedness within the field of Life Sciences in Late Modern English: Evidence from the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Corpus and methodology -- 3. The analysis -- 3.1 Structure variable -- 3.2 Chronological distribution -- 3.3 Genre variable -- 3.4 Semantic categorisation -- 3.5 Reversibility of components -- 4. Conclusions -- Works cited -- Chapter 7. Engagement in the botanists of the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts: Flourishing female scientific writing -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Eighteenth- and nineteenth-century English botany -- 2.1 Eighteenth- and nineteenth-century English botanists -- 2.2 Sources. 3. Directives in female and male botanists -- 4. Historical evolution of directives -- 5. Conclusion -- Works cited -- Chapter 8. Linguistic indicators of persuasion in female authors in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Women scientists, prefaces and persuasion -- 3. Material and methodology -- 4. Data analysis and discussion -- 4.1 Prefaces and bodies: General data -- 5. Concluding remarks -- Works cited -- Chapter 9. Persuasion in English scientific writing: Exploring suasive verbs in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts and posthumanism English texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Persuasion, stance and suasive verbs in scientific writing -- 3. Corpus and methodology -- 4. Analysis of data -- 5. Concluding remarks -- Works cited -- Chapter 10. "If you will take the trouble to inquire into it rather closely, I think you will find that it is not worth very much": Authorial presence through conditionals and citation sequences in late modern English life sciences texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The author in the text in late modern English scientific writing -- 3. An overview on studies of authorial presence -- 4. Conditionals and authorial presence -- 5. Expressing opinions by means of citation sequences -- 6. Corpus and methodology -- 7. Analysis of the results -- 7.1 Conditionals -- 7.2 Citation sequences -- 8. Concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- Funding -- Works cited -- Chapter 11. "This ingenious hypothe∫is hath a great appearance of truth": The expression of true facts in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction and objectives -- 2. On adverbs and examples: Expressing true facts in Life Sciences -- 3. Evidence in context: data from CELiST -- 4. "My views amount to the following": A brief analysis of the examples -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- Works cited. Chapter 12. Evaluative that structures in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Stance and evaluative-that -- 3. Method -- 4. Evaluative that-expressions: Analysis and results -- 4.1 Evaluative entity -- 4.2 Evaluative stance -- 4.3 Evaluative source -- 4.4 Expression -- 5. Conclusion -- Works cited -- Chapter 13. Authority and deontic modals in Late Modern English: Evidence from the Corpus of Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Deontic modality -- 3. Method -- 4. Deontic modals in CELiST -- 4.1 The form of deontic modals -- 4.2 The function of deontic modals -- 5. Conclusions -- Works cited -- Chapter 14. A study of coherence relations in the English scientific register: Conjunctions in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Methodology -- 2.1 Corpus description -- 2.2 Variables and procedure -- 3. Data analysis -- 3.1 Type of relation -- 3.2 Sex of author -- 3.3 Age of author -- 3.4 Place of education -- 3.5 Genre and level of specialisation -- 4. Conclusions -- Works cited -- Appendix 1. Conjunctions not found in the corpus -- Appendix 2. Conjunctions found in the corpus -- Additive conjunctions -- Causal conjunctions -- Adversative conjunctions -- Temporal conjunctions -- Chapter 15. Spotting register-internal variation in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century life sciences: Descriptivemess and argumentation in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Register variation and change in historical and scientific English -- 3. Methodology: The Multidimensional Analysis applied -- 4. Analysis of data -- 4.1 Variation across time and disciplines -- 4.2 Variation across genres -- 4.3 Variation across male and female scientific discourse -- 5. Concluding remarks -- Works cited -- Index. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910794529403321 |
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , [2021] | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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"All families and genera" : exploring the Corpus of English life sciences texts / / edited by Isabel Moskowich, Inés Lareo, Gonzalo Camiña |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , [2021] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (328 pages) |
Disciplina | 410.188 |
Soggetto topico |
English literature - 18th century - History and criticism
English literature - 19th century - History and criticism Life sciences - Great Britain - History - 18th century Life sciences - Great Britain - History - 19th century Life sciences literature - Great Britain - History and criticism |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Intro -- "All families and genera" -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Table of contents -- About this book -- Explorations of life sciences writing (1700-1900): A Preface -- List of contributors -- Chapter 1. The making of the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts (CELiST), a bunch of disciplines -- 1. Introduction: Biology or something else? -- 2. The structure of CELiST -- 3. The authors in CELiST -- 3.1 The sex of the authors -- 3.2 Geography -- 4. The texts in CELiST -- 4.1 The genres in CELiST -- Works cited -- Chapter 2. Editorial policy in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts: Criteria, conventions, encoding and editorial marks -- 1. General remarks -- 1.1 Headers -- 1.2 Fonts -- 1.3 Page numbers -- 1.4 Chapter and section titles -- 1.5 Paragraphs and lines -- 1.6 Analysable items -- 1.7 Omissions and amendments -- 2. Mark-up language -- 2.1 Tags in CELiST -- 3. Editorial marks and decisions -- 3.1 Pages -- 3.2 Lines and paragraphs -- 3.3 Words -- 4. List of editorial marks used in CELiST -- 5. Concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter 3. A look beyond the texts: The samples in the eighteenth-century Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The eighteenth-century samples in CELiST -- 1707. James Douglas, M. D. -- 1707. Sir Hans Sloane -- 1717. James Keill -- 1720. William Gibson -- 1723. Patrick Blair -- 1730. Thomas Boreman -- 1737. Elizabeth Blackwell -- 1737. John Brickell M. D. -- 1743. George Edwards -- 1750. Griffith Hughes -- 1752. James Solas Dodd -- 1758. William Borlase -- 1766. Thomas Pennant -- 1769. Edward Bancroft -- 1774. Oliver Goldsmith -- 1774. William Withering -- 1786. William Speechly -- 1789. James Bolton -- 1794. Edward Donovan -- 1795. Sir James Edward Smith -- 3. A note on the Appendix -- Acknowledgements -- Works cited.
Chapter 4. A look beyond the texts: The samples in the nineteenth-century Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Description of the nineteenth-century life sciences texts -- 1804. Maria Elizabetha Jacson -- 1808. Alexander Wilson -- 1816. Priscilla Wakefield -- 1819. Sir William Lawrence -- 1824. Edward Jenner -- 1828. John Davidson Godman -- 1832. Almira Hart Lincoln (Phelps) -- 1835. Sir William Jardine -- 1840. Anne Pratt -- 1848. Sir John Graham Dalyell -- 1859. Elizabeth (Cabot Cary) Agassiz -- 1859. Charles Robert Darwin -- 1863. Thomas Henry Huxley -- 1867. Herbert Spencer -- 1876. Alexander Macallister -- 1879. Phebe Lankester -- 1880. Francis Maitland Balfour -- 1889. Sir Francis Galton -- 1895. Emily Lovira Gregory -- 1898. Alpheus Spring Packard -- Works cited -- Chapter 5. The Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts and representativeness: An information and documentation analysis of Late Modern English scientific Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The corpus and representativeness -- 3. Methodology -- 4. Findings and discussion -- Qualitative representativeness -- Quantitative representativeness -- 5. Concluding remarks -- Works cited -- Chapter 6. Lexical fixedness within the field of Life Sciences in Late Modern English: Evidence from the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Corpus and methodology -- 3. The analysis -- 3.1 Structure variable -- 3.2 Chronological distribution -- 3.3 Genre variable -- 3.4 Semantic categorisation -- 3.5 Reversibility of components -- 4. Conclusions -- Works cited -- Chapter 7. Engagement in the botanists of the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts: Flourishing female scientific writing -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Eighteenth- and nineteenth-century English botany -- 2.1 Eighteenth- and nineteenth-century English botanists -- 2.2 Sources. 3. Directives in female and male botanists -- 4. Historical evolution of directives -- 5. Conclusion -- Works cited -- Chapter 8. Linguistic indicators of persuasion in female authors in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Women scientists, prefaces and persuasion -- 3. Material and methodology -- 4. Data analysis and discussion -- 4.1 Prefaces and bodies: General data -- 5. Concluding remarks -- Works cited -- Chapter 9. Persuasion in English scientific writing: Exploring suasive verbs in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts and posthumanism English texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Persuasion, stance and suasive verbs in scientific writing -- 3. Corpus and methodology -- 4. Analysis of data -- 5. Concluding remarks -- Works cited -- Chapter 10. "If you will take the trouble to inquire into it rather closely, I think you will find that it is not worth very much": Authorial presence through conditionals and citation sequences in late modern English life sciences texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The author in the text in late modern English scientific writing -- 3. An overview on studies of authorial presence -- 4. Conditionals and authorial presence -- 5. Expressing opinions by means of citation sequences -- 6. Corpus and methodology -- 7. Analysis of the results -- 7.1 Conditionals -- 7.2 Citation sequences -- 8. Concluding remarks -- Acknowledgements -- Funding -- Works cited -- Chapter 11. "This ingenious hypothe∫is hath a great appearance of truth": The expression of true facts in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction and objectives -- 2. On adverbs and examples: Expressing true facts in Life Sciences -- 3. Evidence in context: data from CELiST -- 4. "My views amount to the following": A brief analysis of the examples -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- Works cited. Chapter 12. Evaluative that structures in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Stance and evaluative-that -- 3. Method -- 4. Evaluative that-expressions: Analysis and results -- 4.1 Evaluative entity -- 4.2 Evaluative stance -- 4.3 Evaluative source -- 4.4 Expression -- 5. Conclusion -- Works cited -- Chapter 13. Authority and deontic modals in Late Modern English: Evidence from the Corpus of Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Deontic modality -- 3. Method -- 4. Deontic modals in CELiST -- 4.1 The form of deontic modals -- 4.2 The function of deontic modals -- 5. Conclusions -- Works cited -- Chapter 14. A study of coherence relations in the English scientific register: Conjunctions in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Methodology -- 2.1 Corpus description -- 2.2 Variables and procedure -- 3. Data analysis -- 3.1 Type of relation -- 3.2 Sex of author -- 3.3 Age of author -- 3.4 Place of education -- 3.5 Genre and level of specialisation -- 4. Conclusions -- Works cited -- Appendix 1. Conjunctions not found in the corpus -- Appendix 2. Conjunctions found in the corpus -- Additive conjunctions -- Causal conjunctions -- Adversative conjunctions -- Temporal conjunctions -- Chapter 15. Spotting register-internal variation in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century life sciences: Descriptivemess and argumentation in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Register variation and change in historical and scientific English -- 3. Methodology: The Multidimensional Analysis applied -- 4. Analysis of data -- 4.1 Variation across time and disciplines -- 4.2 Variation across genres -- 4.3 Variation across male and female scientific discourse -- 5. Concluding remarks -- Works cited -- Index. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910827051003321 |
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , [2021] | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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30 great myths about the Romantics / / Duncan Wu |
Autore | Wu Duncan |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Chichester, England : , : Wiley Blackwell, , 2015 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (334 p.) |
Disciplina | 820.9/145 |
Soggetto topico |
English literature - 19th century - History and criticism
English literature - 18th century - History and criticism Romanticism - Great Britain Literature and society - Great Britain - History |
ISBN |
1-118-84318-5
1-118-84310-X 1-118-84317-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Acknowledgements; Introduction; A Note on Monetary Values; Myth 1 Romanticism began in 1798; Myth 2 English Romanticism was a reaction against the Enlightenment; 2.1 New Forms of Sociability; 2.2 The Language of Passion; 2.3 The Poet as Prophet; Myth 3 The Romantics hated the sciences; Myth 4 The Romantics repudiated the Augustans, especially Pope and Dryden; Myth 5 The Romantic poets were misunderstood, solitary geniuses; Myth 6 Romantic poems were produced by spontaneous inspiration; Myth 7 Blake was mad
Myth 8 Blake wrote `Jerusalem' as an anthem to EnglishnessMyth 9 Lyrical Ballads (1798) was designed to illustrate `the two cardinal points of poetry', using poems about everyday life and the supernatural; Myth 10 Wordsworth's Preface to Lyrical Ballads was a manifesto for the Romantic revolution; Myth 11 Wordsworth had an incestuous relationship with his sister; Myth 12 Tory Wordsworth; Myth 13 The person from Porlock; Myth 14 Jane Austen had an incestuous relationship with her sister; Myth 15 The Keswick rapist; Myth 16 Byron had an affair with his sister Myth 17 Byron was a great lover of womenMyth 18 Byron was a champion of democracy; Myth 19 Byron was a `noble warrior' who died fighting for Greek freedom; Myth 20 Shelley committed suicide by sailboat; Myth 21 Shelley's heart; Myth 22 Keats's `humble origins'; Myth 23 Keats was gay; Myth 24 Keats was killed by a review; Myth 25 Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote Frankenstein; Myth 26 Women writers were an exploited underclass-unknown, unloved, and unpaid; Myth 27 The Romantics were atheists; Myth 28 The Romantics were counter-cultural drug users Myth 29 The Romantics practised free love on principleMyth 30 The Romantics were the rock stars of their day; Coda; Further Reading; Index; EULA |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910132255703321 |
Wu Duncan
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Chichester, England : , : Wiley Blackwell, , 2015 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
30 great myths about the Romantics / / Duncan Wu |
Autore | Wu Duncan |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Chichester, England : , : Wiley Blackwell, , 2015 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (334 p.) |
Disciplina | 820.9/145 |
Soggetto topico |
English literature - 19th century - History and criticism
English literature - 18th century - History and criticism Romanticism - Great Britain Literature and society - Great Britain - History |
ISBN |
1-118-84318-5
1-118-84310-X 1-118-84317-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Acknowledgements; Introduction; A Note on Monetary Values; Myth 1 Romanticism began in 1798; Myth 2 English Romanticism was a reaction against the Enlightenment; 2.1 New Forms of Sociability; 2.2 The Language of Passion; 2.3 The Poet as Prophet; Myth 3 The Romantics hated the sciences; Myth 4 The Romantics repudiated the Augustans, especially Pope and Dryden; Myth 5 The Romantic poets were misunderstood, solitary geniuses; Myth 6 Romantic poems were produced by spontaneous inspiration; Myth 7 Blake was mad
Myth 8 Blake wrote `Jerusalem' as an anthem to EnglishnessMyth 9 Lyrical Ballads (1798) was designed to illustrate `the two cardinal points of poetry', using poems about everyday life and the supernatural; Myth 10 Wordsworth's Preface to Lyrical Ballads was a manifesto for the Romantic revolution; Myth 11 Wordsworth had an incestuous relationship with his sister; Myth 12 Tory Wordsworth; Myth 13 The person from Porlock; Myth 14 Jane Austen had an incestuous relationship with her sister; Myth 15 The Keswick rapist; Myth 16 Byron had an affair with his sister Myth 17 Byron was a great lover of womenMyth 18 Byron was a champion of democracy; Myth 19 Byron was a `noble warrior' who died fighting for Greek freedom; Myth 20 Shelley committed suicide by sailboat; Myth 21 Shelley's heart; Myth 22 Keats's `humble origins'; Myth 23 Keats was gay; Myth 24 Keats was killed by a review; Myth 25 Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote Frankenstein; Myth 26 Women writers were an exploited underclass-unknown, unloved, and unpaid; Myth 27 The Romantics were atheists; Myth 28 The Romantics were counter-cultural drug users Myth 29 The Romantics practised free love on principleMyth 30 The Romantics were the rock stars of their day; Coda; Further Reading; Index; EULA |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910826910503321 |
Wu Duncan
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Chichester, England : , : Wiley Blackwell, , 2015 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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The ABC of criticism [[electronic resource] ] : aspects of craft and creation in the critical enterprise / / by Frank Ellis |
Autore | Ellis Frank H (Frank Hale), <1916-2007.> |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Bethesda, : Academica Press, 2004 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (244 p.) |
Disciplina | 801/.95 |
Soggetto topico |
English literature - 18th century - History and criticism
Literature - History and criticism - Theory, etc Criticism - Authorship |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910454219203321 |
Ellis Frank H (Frank Hale), <1916-2007.>
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Bethesda, : Academica Press, 2004 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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The ABC of criticism [[electronic resource] ] : aspects of craft and creation in the critical enterprise / / by Frank Ellis |
Autore | Ellis Frank H (Frank Hale), <1916-2007.> |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Bethesda, : Academica Press, 2004 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (244 p.) |
Disciplina | 801/.95 |
Soggetto topico |
English literature - 18th century - History and criticism
Literature - History and criticism - Theory, etc Criticism - Authorship |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910782189903321 |
Ellis Frank H (Frank Hale), <1916-2007.>
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Bethesda, : Academica Press, 2004 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Actions and objects from Hobbes to Richardson [[electronic resource] /] / Jonathan Kramnick |
Autore | Kramnick Jonathan Brody |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Stanford, Calif., : Stanford University Press, c2010 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (320 p.) |
Disciplina | 820.9/384 |
Soggetto topico |
English literature - 18th century - History and criticism
English literature - Early modern, 1500-1700 - History and criticism Act (Philosophy) in literature Philosophy of mind in literature Causation in literature Philosophy, English - 17th century Philosophy, English - 18th century |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN | 0-8047-7512-5 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto | Actions and Objects from Hobbes to Richardson -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction: Nothing from Nothing -- 1. Actions, Agents, Causes -- 2. Consciousness and Mental Causation: Lucretius, Rochester, Locke -- 3. Rochester’s Mind -- 4. Uneasiness, or Locke among Others -- 5. Haywood and Consent -- 6. Action and Inaction in Samuel Richardson’s Clarissa -- Notes -- Index |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910459649803321 |
Kramnick Jonathan Brody
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Stanford, Calif., : Stanford University Press, c2010 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Actions and objects from Hobbes to Richardson [[electronic resource] /] / Jonathan Kramnick |
Autore | Kramnick Jonathan Brody |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Stanford, Calif., : Stanford University Press, c2010 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (320 p.) |
Disciplina | 820.9/384 |
Soggetto topico |
English literature - 18th century - History and criticism
English literature - Early modern, 1500-1700 - History and criticism Act (Philosophy) in literature Philosophy of mind in literature Causation in literature Philosophy, English - 17th century Philosophy, English - 18th century |
ISBN | 0-8047-7512-5 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto | Actions and Objects from Hobbes to Richardson -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction: Nothing from Nothing -- 1. Actions, Agents, Causes -- 2. Consciousness and Mental Causation: Lucretius, Rochester, Locke -- 3. Rochester’s Mind -- 4. Uneasiness, or Locke among Others -- 5. Haywood and Consent -- 6. Action and Inaction in Samuel Richardson’s Clarissa -- Notes -- Index |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910785470103321 |
Kramnick Jonathan Brody
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Stanford, Calif., : Stanford University Press, c2010 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Acts of implication : suggestion and covert meaning in the works of Dryden, Swift, Pope, and Austen / / Irvin Ehrenpreis |
Autore | Ehrenpreis Irvin <1920-1985> |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Berkeley : , : University of California Press, , [1980] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (x, 158 pages) |
Disciplina | 820/.9/006 |
Collana | The Beckman lectures |
Soggetto topico |
English literature - 18th century - History and criticism
English Languages & Literatures English Literature |
ISBN | 0-585-28923-9 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910495867703321 |
Ehrenpreis Irvin <1920-1985>
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Berkeley : , : University of California Press, , [1980] | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Affect and abolition in the Anglo-Atlantic, 1770-1830 / / edited by Stephen Ahern |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2016 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (236 pages) |
Disciplina | 820.9/355 |
Altri autori (Persone) | AhernStephen |
Soggetto topico |
English literature - 18th century - History and criticism
English literature - 19th century - History and criticism Slavery in literature Sentimentalism in literature Affect (Psychology) in literature English language - 18th century - Rhetoric English language - 19th century - Rhetoric Antislavery movements - Great Britain - History Antislavery movements - United States - History |
ISBN |
1-138-27663-4
1-315-26324-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto | pt. 1. Sympathy's empire -- pt. 2. Nation, narration, emancipation -- pt. 3. Spectacles of suffering -- pt. 4. Sentimental bondage. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910154992203321 |
London ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2016 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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