| Hayden White - 1990 - 264 pages
...discourse that can be rilled with different contents, real or imaginary as the case may be, already possesses a content prior to any given actualization of it in speech or writing. It is this "content of the form" of narrative discourse in historical thought that is examined in the... | |
| James A. Fujii - 2023 - 316 pages
...discourse that can be filled with different contents, real or imaginary as the case may be, already possesses a content prior to any given actualization of it in speech or writing."9 It is this blindness to the signifying aspect of form and structure that has prevented critics... | |
| Teresa De Lauretis - 1994 - 358 pages
...discourse that can be filled with different contents, real or imaginary as the case may be, already possesses a content prior to any given actualization of it in speech or writing" (The Content of the Form xi). contingent material of each film, of each representation, with its marked... | |
| Jerzy Topolski - 1994 - 242 pages
...discourse that can be filled with different contents, real or imaginary as the case may be, already possesses a content prior to any given actualization of it in speech or in writing.49 That is to say, narrative form and style have, contrary to what is often supposed to... | |
| Vivian Carol Sobchack - 1996 - 280 pages
...discourse that can be filled with different contents, real or imaginary as the case may be, already possesses a content prior to any given actualization of it in speech or in writing. It is this 'content of the form' of narrative discourse in historical thought that is examined... | |
| F. R. Ankersmit - 1996 - 444 pages
...discourse that can be filled with different contents, real or imaginary as the case may be, already possesses a content prior to any given actualization of it in speech or in writing. -H. White, The Content of the Form 1. Introduction o theorist of democracy has received... | |
| International Comparative Literature Association. Congress - 2000 - 484 pages
...discourse that can be filled with different contants, real or imaginary as the case may be, already possesses a content prior to any given actualization of it in speech or writing.10 Narrating "history" consists of making conjectures, producing hypothetical links to transform... | |
| Peter X. Feng - 2002 - 324 pages
...discourse that can be filled with different contents, real or imaginary as the case may be, already possesses a content prior to any given actualization of it in speech or in writing. It is this 'content of the form' of narrative discourse in historical thought that is examined... | |
| Esther Sánchez-Pardo - 2003 - 510 pages
...discourse that can be filled with different contents, real or imaginary as the case may be, already possesses a content prior to any given actualization of it in speech or writing" (1987, xi). He points to the rejection of narrative in literary modernism, which goes hand in hand... | |
| Elizabeth A. Clark - 2004 - 340 pages
...contents" and that "adds nothing to the content of the representation," narrative for White "already possesses a content prior to any given actualization of it in speech or writing."15' White believed that by exposing the origins of historiography in "literary sensibility,"... | |
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