It is sometimes difficult to be inspired when trying to write a persuasive essay, book report or thoughtful research paper. Often of times, it is hard to find words that best describe your ideas.
VIPessays now provides a database of over 150,000 quotations and proverbs from the famous inventors, philosophers, sportsmen, artists, celebrities, business people, and authors that are aimed to enrich and strengthen your essay, term paper, book report, thesis or research paper.
Try our free search of constantly updated quotations and proverbs database.
Letter "L" » literary critic
«The literary critic, or the critic of any other specific form of artistic expression, may detach himself from the world for as long as the work of art he is contemplating appears to do the same.»
Author: Clive James
(
Critic)
|
Keywords:
artistic,
art critic,
contemplating,
critic,
detach,
detaching,
literary,
Literary Art,
literary critic,
literary work,
specific,
The Critic,
work of art
«Literary critics, however, frequently suffer from a curious belief that every author longs to extend the boundaries of literary art, wants to explore new dimensions of the human spirit, and if he doesn't, he should be ashamed of himself.»
«PUBLISH, n. In literary affairs, to become the fundamental element in a cone of critics.»
«I have discovered the most exciting, the most arduous literary form of all, the most difficult to master, the most pregnant in curious possibilities. I mean the advertisement. It is far easier to write ten passably effective Sonnets, good enough to take in the not too inquiring critic, than one effective advertisement that will take in a few thousand of the uncritical buying public.»
«Literary criticism can be no more than a reasoned account of the feeling produced upon the critic by the book he is criticizing. Criticism can never be a science: it is, in the first place, much too personal, and in the second, it is concerned with values that science ignores. The touchstone is emotion, not reason. We judge a work of art by its effect on our sincere and vital emotion, and nothing else. All the critical twiddle-twaddle about style and form, all this pseudoscientific classifying and analyzing of books in an imitation-botanical fashion, is mere impertinence and mostly dull jargon.»
Author: D.H. Lawrence
(
Essayist,
Novelist,
Poet)
|
Keywords:
analyzing,
art critic,
botanical,
classify,
critic,
critical,
criticizing,
ignores,
imitation,
impertinence,
in the first place,
jargon,
jargon of,
literary,
Literary Art,
literary critic,
literary criticism,
literary work,
mostly,
pseudoscientific,
reasoned,
The Critic,
touchstone,
touchstones,
twaddle,
twiddle,
twiddling,
work of art
«No publisher should ever express an opinion on the value of what he publishes. That is a matter entirely for the literary critic to decide. I can quite understand how any ordinary critic would be strongly prejudiced against a work that was accompanied by a premature and unnecessary panegyric from the publisher. A publisher is simply a useful middle-man. It is not for him to anticipate the verdict of criticism.»
Author: Oscar Wilde
(
Critic,
Dramatist,
Novelist,
Poet)
|
Keywords:
accompanied,
literary critic,
literary criticism,
literary work,
panegyric,
prejudiced,
premature,
publishes,
The Verdict