Sympathy for the Devil: How Writers on Crime Fiction Throw Interest on the Murderer
‘[T]he poet […] must throw the interest on the murderer: our sympathy must be with him’ Thomas De Quincey – …
‘[T]he poet […] must throw the interest on the murderer: our sympathy must be with him’ Thomas De Quincey – …
Imagism, or in the French, Imagisme, as it was originally named, was a short lived but influential poetic movement initiated …
William Empson’s ‘Seven Types of Ambiguity’ provides a significant introduction to literary theory for the new critical reader. Empson’s interpretations …
The development of the novel during the 18th century is considered to have been influenced by increased literacy and a …
If Daniel Defoe had ever needed a headline to announce his literary heroine to the world, then ‘The Fortunes and …