Mansions of the Spirit: Essays in Literature and ReligionGeorge A. Panichas |
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Page 96
... man's confessed failures and man's painful redemption . One could continue a considera- tion of isolated examples of prose narratives that superficially point toward the novel , but the prose tale was not produced in any number until a ...
... man's confessed failures and man's painful redemption . One could continue a considera- tion of isolated examples of prose narratives that superficially point toward the novel , but the prose tale was not produced in any number until a ...
Page 115
... man's perennial desire for a better world with the continuous awareness of man's tendency to trip himself up and turn his very virtues into snares - achieving all this in spite of the plot , as it were , by placing an image where it ...
... man's perennial desire for a better world with the continuous awareness of man's tendency to trip himself up and turn his very virtues into snares - achieving all this in spite of the plot , as it were , by placing an image where it ...
Page 317
... man's situation in the world as a kind of human loss . Even Sartre , more rigorously philosophical than Camus in his writings , speaks of man as being abandoned or condemned to be free . Such dramatic and emotive language prompts the ...
... man's situation in the world as a kind of human loss . Even Sartre , more rigorously philosophical than Camus in his writings , speaks of man as being abandoned or condemned to be free . Such dramatic and emotive language prompts the ...
Contents
Preface | 11 |
PART I | 28 |
HYATT H WAGGONER Point of View in Ameri | 47 |
Copyright | |
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accept achieved action appear attempt awareness Bear becomes beginning believe called Camus century characters Christ Christian Church comes conception concerned criticism death described divine drama English essay evil example existence experience expression fact faith Fall Father feeling fiction finally forgiveness Franny freedom Genet gives Greek Greek tragedy hand heart human imagination interest kind knowledge Lawrence literary literature living man's meaning mind moral moving myth nature never novel objective perhaps person philosophical play poem poet poetry possible present problem question reality reason religion religious remains revelation ritual says seems sense society soul spirit story structure suffering suggest symbols theme theological things thought tion tradition tragedy tragic true truth turn ultimate understanding University values vision whole wisdom writes York