Results for ' Russian literary criticism'

980 found
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  1.  8
    Archetypal Literary Criticism and Structuralism.Xiuli Kuang & Chen'bei Yang - forthcoming - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal).
    The study of literature from the point of view of the search for archetypal images and the study of artistic creativity from the standpoint of structuralism are two important trends. Both of these trends have emerged in the contexts of different scientific paradigms. The origin of archetypal criticism is associated with the figure of Herman Northrop Fry, and the basis of archetypal criticism is psychology, namely the concept of psychoanalysis, founded by Sigmund Freud and Carl Gustav Jung. While (...)
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  2.  17
    Literary criticism and interactive advertising: Bakhtinian perspective on interactivity.Gulnara Z. Karimova - 2011 - Communications 36 (4):463-482.
    This article examines interactivity using the concept of dialogic relationships introduced by Russian philosopher Mikhail Bakhtin and the concept of transtextuality, proposed by French literary theorist Gérard Genette. These concepts help to reveal two parallel strata of interactivity: the stratum of interactivity between the viewer and the message and the stratum of interactivity that exists inside the message and its surrounding. It concludes that interactivity can be conceived as a relation and that the message is a co-creation. The (...)
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  3.  2
    Flight from Eden: The Origins of Modern Literary Criticism and Theory.Steven Cassedy - 1990 - Univ of California Press.
    "German--and particularly French--sources of the revolution that has occurred in literary theory during the past thirty years have long been recognized. The Russian contribution to these events has been hinted at previously, but Cassedy documents in detail the extraordinary work of Potebnya, Veselovskij, and other figures virtually unknown in the West.... An important contribution to intellectual history and literary theory."--Michael Holquist, author of Dostoevsky and the Novel "An astonishing number of complex movements and ideas--from Humboldt through (...) and French Symbolists to Heidegger, Husserl, Roman Jakobson and the deconstructors, from symbology to logology and iconology--begin to fit together in this wide-ranging and provocative book.... Cassedy's book will outrage some readers, delight others, and enlighten all."--Caryl Emerson, author of Boris Godunov: Transpositions of a Russian Theme. (shrink)
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  4.  5
    The russian influence on the literary and critical writings of Mikhail Naimy.M. L. Swanson - 2017 - Liberal Arts in Russia 6 (1):44-66.
    In the article, the author studies the Russian influence on the literary, philosophical and critical works of Mikhail Naimy, the world renowned figure in modern Arabic literature. His writings contributed to changing its topics, language and style. Numerous researchers have studied the impact of British, American and French cultures and literatures on the writings of Naimy and his colleagues from the Pen Association, the literary league founded in New York by several young Arab-American emigrants. Meanwhile, it was (...)
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  5.  14
    Russian realisms: literature and painting, 1840-1890.Molly Brunson - 2016 - DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press.
    One fall evening in 1880, Russian painter Ilya Repin welcomed an unexpected visitor to his home: Lev Tolstoy. The renowned realists talked for hours, and Tolstoy turned his critical eye to the sketches in Repin's studio. Tolstoy's criticisms would later prompt Repin to reflect on the question of creative expression and conclude that the path to artistic truth is relative, dependent on the mode and medium of representation. In this original study, Molly Brunson traces many such paths that converged (...)
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  6.  51
    Literary critics in a new era.Martin Paulsen - 2008 - Studies in East European Thought 60 (3):251 - 260.
    In this article I look at changes in the role of literary criticism in Russian literature since perestroika. The article draws on the research of Sergej Čuprinin and Birgit Menzel. Based on my readings of the debate among literary critics about what literary criticism is and should be, and focusing on the interrelationship in the triangle writer-critic-reader, I establish a typology of contemporary literary criticism: 1. the critic as a master of the (...)
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  7.  8
    The Bakhtin Circle: In the Master's Absence.Craig Brandist, David Shepherd, Lecturer in Russian Studies David Shepherd, Galin Tihanov & Junior Research Fellow in Russian and German Intellectual History Galin Tihanov - 2004 - Manchester University Press.
    The Russian philosopher and cultural theorist Mikhail Bakhtin has traditionally been seen as the leading figure in the group of intellectuals known as the Bakhtin Circle. The writings of other members of the Circle are considered much less important than his work, while Bakhtin's achievement has been exaggerated in proportion to the downgrading of the thinkers with whom he associated in the 1920s. This volume, which includes new translations and studies of the work of the most important members of (...)
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  8.  12
    The Revolution of Moral Consciousness: Nietzsche in Russian Literature, 1890-1914.Edith W. Clowes - 1988 - Northern Illinois University Press.
    No other thinker so engaged the Russian cultural imagination of the early twentieth century as did Friedrich Nietzche. The Revolution of Moral Consciousness shows how Nietzschean thought influenced the brilliant resurgence of literary life that started in the 1890s and continued for four decades. Through an analysis of the Russian encounter with Nietzsche, Edith Clowes defines the shift in ethical and aesthetic vision that motivated Russia's unprecedented artistic renascence and at the same time led its followers to (...)
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  9.  30
    Book Review: A History of Modern Criticism: 1750-1950, Volume 7: German, Russian, and Eastern European Criticism, 1900-1950. [REVIEW]Eva L. Corredor - 1996 - Philosophy and Literature 20 (1):259-260.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:A History of Modern Criticism: 1750–1950, Volume 7: German, Russian, and Eastern European Criticism, 1900–1950Eva L. CorredorA History of Modern Criticism: 1750–1950, Volume 7: German, Russian, and Eastern European Criticism, 1900–1950, by René Wellek; xvii & 458 pp. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1991, $42.50.The seventh volume of René Wellek’s history of modern criticism may well be the most interesting of (...)
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  10.  3
    Russian Paris” and the Rising Star of Nikolay Gumilyov.L. V. Vyskochkov, A. A. Shelaeva & O. B. Sokurova - 2018 - Philotheos 18 (1):117-126.
    The article is dedicated to the early, Paris period of life and literary work of Nikolay Gumilyov (1906–1908), which is still insufficiently studied and understood by scholars. The paper aims to study the influence of this period on shaping Gumilyov’s personality and his spiritual values and aspirations, polishing of his literary taste, gradual gaining of an independent ideological and aesthetic platform and development of his inimitable poetic style. – The research for the paper was based on the comprehensive (...)
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  11.  15
    English emergencies and Russian rescues, C. 1875 – 2000.Noa Halevy - 2017 - Common Knowledge 23 (3):404-439.
    This second installment in a chronologically arranged, three-part sequence continues the author's examination of Anglo-American literati who, in the later nineteenth and twentieth centuries, turned — in acts of combined xenophilia and xenophobia — to Russian literature and literary theory in order to escape the dominant influence of avant-garde movements in France. These Anglophone writers found in Russian exemplars a responsible, morally rigorous, and pragmatic, yet philosophically sophisticated, alternative to what they described as the amoral, superficial, and (...)
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  12.  5
    Doubt, Atheism, and the Nineteenth-Century Russian Intelligentsia.Victoria Frede - 2011 - University of Wisconsin Press.
    The autocratic rule of both tsar and church in imperial Russia gave rise not only to a revolutionary movement in the nineteenth century but also to a crisis of meaning among members of the intelligentsia. Personal faith became the subject of intense scrutiny as individuals debated the existence of God and the immortality of the soul, debates reflected in the best-known novels of the day. Friendships were formed and broken in exchanges over the status of the eternal. The salvation of (...)
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  13.  14
    The Influence of Scientific Criticism and Self-Criticism on the Forming of the New Human Being.V. I. Danilenko - 1976 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 15 (1):71-72.
    Under the conditions of the revolution in science and technology, of tremendous social changes, of the tempestuous and significant growth in the prestige of scientific knowledge, and of the exacerbation of the ideological struggle, there has been an immeasurable broadening of the social tasks and spheres of operation of such social phenomena as scientific criticism and self-criticism. Study of social, theoretical, and psychological cross-sections of these phenomena is one of the necessary conditions for cultivating lofty civic qualities, a (...)
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  14.  21
    Lesia Ukrainka: Ukrainian National Identity Against the "Russian Ukrainians" Dichotomy.N. Y. Tarasova - 2023 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 23:80-94.
    _Purpose._ The article is dedicated to the research of Lesia Ukrainka’s correspondence, journalistic and literary-critical articles concerning the problem of national identity as a factor in overcoming the "Russian Ukrainians" dichotomy. Achieving this purpose involves solving the following tasks: 1) to reveal the poetess’s views on the essence and social manifestations of worldview fluctuations in the life activities of the Ukrainian elite at the end of the 19th and 20th centuries; 2) outline her strategy for overcoming cultural "inter-words" (...)
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  15. The Death and Return of the Author: Criticism and Subjectivity in Barthes, Foucault and Derrida.John M. Burke - 1989 - Dissertation, The University of Edinburgh (United Kingdom)
    Available from UMI in association with The British Library. Requires signed TDF. ;This thesis proposes that the death of the author is neither a desirable, nor properly attainable goal of criticism, and that the concept of the author remained profoundly active even--and especially--as its disappearance was being articulated. ;As the phrase implies, the death of the author is seen to repeat the Nietzschean deicide. In Barthes, the idea of the author is explicitly connected to that of God, for Foucault (...)
     
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  16. Classical Literary Criticism Aristotle: On the Art of Poetry ; Horace: On the Art of Poetry ; Longinus: On the Sublime.T. S. Dorsch, Horace, Aristotle & Longinus - 1965 - Penguin Books.
     
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  17.  6
    Modernism and its discontents: philosophical problems of twentieth-century literary theory.Bruce Edward Fleming - 1995 - New York: P. Lang.
    Literary theory of the twentieth century in the Anglo-American tradition forms a coherent whole, dividing into discrete clusters. This theory is riddled with purely logical problems inherent in its enterprise, resulting from the fact that Modernist theory develops as an offshoot of Romanticism. Such fundamental flaws, or discontents, afflict all Modernist theory, from Russian Formalism through Structuralism and Deconstruction. The problems of Modernist theory cannot be solved; at most we can resolve to take theory in a new direction.
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  18.  15
    Literary Criticism in the Exegetical Scholia to the Iliad: A Sketch.N. J. Richardson - 1980 - Classical Quarterly 30 (02):265-.
    The Homeric Scholia are not the most obvious source for literary criticism in the modern sense. And yet if one takes the trouble to read through them one will find many valuable observations about poetic technique and poetic qualities. Nowadays we tend to emphasize different aspects from those which preoccupied ancient critics, but that may be a good reason for looking again at what they have to say.
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  19.  5
    Literary Criticism versus Aesthetic.Elisabeth Décultot - 2023 - Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift für Literaturwissenschaft Und Geistesgeschichte 97 (1):41-51.
    The topical focus of the following inquiry is the critical engagement of French scholars and writers ca. 1800 – for example, Madame de Staël or Charles de Villers – with German philosophical aesthetics. With regard to this case study, the changing relationship of literary criticism and aesthetics within different national contexts can be brought into view. In France, the concept »esthétique«, which was imported as a translation of the German neologism »Ästhetik« current since the publication of Baumgarten’s work, (...)
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  20.  17
    Literary Criticism in Antiquity.J. W. H. Atkins - 1938 - Philosophical Review 47 (4):440-441.
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  21.  18
    Ancient Literary Criticism.Andrew Laird (ed.) - 2006 - Oxford University Press.
    The literary criticism of classical Greece and Rome has had an extensive influence on modern thought. The important ancient critics discussed in this book include Plato, Aristotle and Horace. This volume has a helpful introduction, chronology and suggestions for further reading. It will appeal to any readers with interests in literature, criticism or aesthetics. All Latin and Greek quotations are translated.
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  22.  11
    Ancient Literary Criticism.Andrew Laird (ed.) - 2005 - Oxford University Press UK.
    The literary criticism of classical Greece and Rome has had an extensive influence on modern thought. The important ancient critics discussed in this book include Plato, Aristotle and Horace. This volume has a helpful introduction, chronology and suggestions for further reading. It will appeal to any readers with interests in literature, criticism or aesthetics. All Latin and Greek quotations are translated.
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  23. Leavis, literary criticism and philosophy.Peter Byrne - 1979 - British Journal of Aesthetics 19 (3):263-273.
    This article explores and defends some of f r leavis's ideas about the nature of reasoning in literary criticism. In particular, It examines leavis's contention that the validity of literary criticism does not wait upon a theoretical defence of its canons of judgments of standards. It aims to show that this eschewal of theoretical thought is rationally justifiable and that the form of reasoning leavis advocates for literary criticism has respectable parallels elsewhere, Not least (...)
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  24.  24
    Literary Criticism: Plato to DrydenLiterary Criticism: Pope to Croce.E. N. B., Allan H. Gilbert, Gay W. Allen & Harry H. Clark - 1942 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 2 (5):75.
  25.  49
    Literary Criticism and the Study of the Unconscious.Maude Bodkin - 1927 - The Monist 37 (3):445-468.
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  26.  23
    English Literary Criticism: 17th and 18th Centuries.J. W. H. Atkins - 1953 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 11 (4):421-422.
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  27.  29
    Literary Criticism for Places.Eric L. Ball - 2006 - Symploke 14 (1):232-251.
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  28.  11
    Literary Criticism and Its Discontents.Geoffrey Hartman - 1976 - Critical Inquiry 3 (2):203-220.
    Literary criticism is neither more nor less important today than it has been since the becoming an accepted activity in the Renaissance. The humanists of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries created the institution of criticism as we know it: the recovery and analysis of works of art. They printed, edited, and interpreted texts that dated from antiquity and which had been lost or disheveled. Evangelical in their fervor, avid in their search for lost or buried riches, they (...)
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  29.  8
    Biosemiotic Literary Criticism: Genesis and Prospectus.W. John Coletta - 2021 - Springer Verlag.
    This volume is based to a large extent on the understanding of biosemiotic literary criticism as a semiotic-model-making enterprise. For Jurij Lotman and Thomas A. Sebeok, “nature writing is essentially a model of the relationship between humans and nature” ; biosemiotic literary criticism, itself a form of nature writing and thus itself an ecological-niche-making enterprise, will be considered to be a model of modeling, a model of nature naturing. Modes and models of analysis drawn from Thomas (...)
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  30.  51
    Literary Criticism and Process Thought.C. Carter Colwell - 1972 - Process Studies 2 (3):183-192.
  31.  16
    Literary Criticism and the Philosophy of Science: Rader's "Fact, Theory, and Literary Explanation".Jay Schleusener - 1975 - Critical Inquiry 1 (4):892-900.
    No reasonably attentive reader of the majorjournals in literary criticism and theory will be unaware of the current interest in something called "history," whether under the specific rubric of a "new historicism" or as part of a commitment to the development of polemical and political applications, in the present, of scholarly research done about the past.
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  32.  6
    Literary Criticism From Plato to Postmodernism: The Humanistic Alternative.James Seaton - 2014 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book offers a history of literary criticism from Plato to the present, arguing that this history can best be seen as a dialogue among three traditions - the Platonic, Neoplatonic, and the humanistic, originated by Aristotle. There are many histories of literary criticism, but this is the first to clarify our understanding of the many seemingly incommensurable approaches employed over the centuries by reference to the three traditions. Making its case by careful analyses of individual (...)
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  33.  11
    Classical Literary Criticism.D. A. Russell & Michael Winterbottom (eds.) - 2008 - Oxford University Press UK.
    This excellent and accessible work includes many major texts in translation: Aristotle's Poetics, Longinus' On Sublimity, Horace's Art of Poetry, Tacitus' Dialogues, and extracts from Plato and Plutarch. Based on the highly praised Ancient Literary Criticism, it contains a new introduction and explanatory notes, and will be of enormous value to students both of Latin and Greek and of literary criticism and theory. ABOUT THE SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made available the (...)
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  34. Literary criticism in the exegetical scholia to the Iliad: a sketch.N. J. Richardson - 2005 - In Andrew Laird (ed.), Ancient Literary Criticism. Oxford University Press UK.
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  35.  76
    Feminist Literary Criticism and the Author.Cheryl Walker - 1990 - Critical Inquiry 16 (3):551-571.
    The issues that Foucault raises about reception and reading are certainly part of the contemporary discussion of literature. However, they are not the only issues with which we, as today’s readers, are concerned. Discussions about the role of the author persist and so we continue to have recourse to the notion of authorship.For instance, in her recent book Sexual / Textual Politics , the feminist critic Toril Moi feels called on to return to these twenty-year-old issues in French theory to (...)
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  36.  12
    Affect Theory and Literary Criticism.Stephen Ahern - 2024 - Emotion Review 16 (2):96-106.
    The “affective turn” is by now long established, part of a wider surge of interest in emotion playing out in a range of disciplines. In literary studies, the conversation about how affect theory might help us to interpret literature is still emerging. The goal of the present discussion is to provide a critical overview of work by scholars who draw on the insights of recent theory to read literary texts written in English. At the same time that the (...)
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  37.  86
    Literary Criticism, a Short History.William K. Wimsatt & Cleanth Brooks - 1957 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 16 (2):270-273.
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  38.  35
    Locke, Literary Criticism, and Philosophy.William Walker - 1994 - Cambridge University Press.
    William Walker's original analysis of John Locke's An Essay Concerning Human Understanding offers a challenging and provocative assessment of Locke's importance as a thinker, bridging the gap between philosophical and literary-critical discussion of his work. He presents Locke as a foundational figure who defines the epistemological and ontological ground on which eighteenth-century and Romantic literature operate and eventually diverge. He is revealed as a crucial figure for emerging modernity, less the familiar empiricist innovator and more the proto-Nietzschean thinker whose (...)
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  39.  13
    Literary Criticism as Creative Artistic Experience.L. I. You-yun - 2011 - Journal of Aesthetic Education (Misc) 1:017.
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  40.  56
    Fielding Derrida: philosophy, literary criticism, history, and the work of deconstruction.Joshua Kates - 2008 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    Introduction: Fielding Derrida -- Jacques Derrida's early writings : alongside skepticism, phenomenology -- Analytic philosophy, and literary criticism -- Deconstruction as skepticism -- Derrida, Husserl, and the commentators : a developmental approach -- A transcendental sense of death : Derrida and the philosophy of language -- Literary theory's languages : the deconstruction of sense vs. the deconstruction of reference -- Jacques Derrida and the problem of philosophical and political modernity -- Jacob Klein and Jacques Derrida : the (...)
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  41.  10
    Literary Criticism and Philosophy.John Hospers - 1984 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 42 (4):461-463.
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  42.  42
    The Literary Criticism of Chesterton and Lewis.Patrick T. Dolan - 1991 - The Chesterton Review 17 (3/4):567-567.
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  43.  39
    Literary Criticism and the Return to "History".David Simpson - 1988 - Critical Inquiry 14 (4):721-747.
    If any emergent historical criticism will tend by its own choice toward inclusiveness and eclecticism, it is also likely to be constrained by more subtle forms of complicity with the theoretical subculture within which it seeks its audience. It is not in principle impossible that we might choose to set going an initiative that is very different indeed from the methods and approaches already in place. But is nonetheless clear that we must be aware, in some propaedeutic way, of (...)
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  44. The literary criticism of John Stuart Mill.F. Parvin Sharpless - 1967 - Paris,: Mouton.
  45. Literary Criticism for New Testament Critics.Norman R. Petersen - 1978
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  46.  33
    Literary criticism and cultural diagnosis: F. R. Leavis on W. H. Auden.S. K. Pradhan - 1972 - British Journal of Aesthetics 12 (4):384-394.
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  47.  13
    Literary Criticism, an Autopsy (review).Roger Seamon - 1998 - Philosophy and Literature 22 (2):523-526.
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  48.  70
    Ecofeminist Literary Criticism: Reading The Orange.Josephine Donovan - 1996 - Hypatia 11 (2):161 - 184.
    Ecofeminism, a new vein in feminist theory, critiques the ontology of domination, whereby living beings are reduced to the status of objects, which diminishes their moral significance, enabling their exploitation, abuse, and destruction. This article explores the possibility of an ecofeminist literary and cultural practice, whereby the text is not reduced to an "it" but rather recognized as a "thou," and where new modes of relationship-dialogue, conversation, and meditative attentiveness-are developed.
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  49. Ecofeminist literary criticism.Gretchen T. Legler - 1997 - In Karen Warren (ed.), Ecofeminism: Women, Culture, Nature. Indiana Univ Pr. pp. 227--238.
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  50. Literary Criticism.Austin Warren - 1941 - In Norman Foerster, John Calvin McGalliard, René Wellek, Austin Warren & Wilbur Schramm (eds.), Literary scholarship. Chapel Hill,: The University of North Carolina Press. pp. 131--174.
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