Imagination: From Plight to Flight.
- 최초 등록일
- 2011.07.31
- 최종 저작일
- 2011.07
- 3페이지/ MS 워드
- 가격 2,000원
소개글
“Why do you write poems?” This abrupt attack from a friend made me embarrassed but I could resume my defensive stance on the spot. “I don’t write any more,” I said to him smiling in my mind with a sigh of relief, “at least until I can see something... something clear and ultimate in me and… and in the outer world.” I felt a sharp glare of contempt as his eyes hardened. His question might be too rough and nonsensical in a sense while my impetuous answer was that of cowardice. He might be aware of my masochistic falsity in the face of reality. It was a shameful moment.
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본문내용
“Can’t paint, can’t write,” Lily Briscoe cries with the pain of “a sudden emptiness; a frustration,” trying to build up a new order for her own world upon the ultimately suppressed reality of irrational war in To the Lighthouse. Woolf’s struggle between literary imagination and objective reality, however, must have been finished at the pressing and apparently provisional vision for “a work of art” under the searchlight beam of the lighthouse. Yes, war, uncontrollable ghosts of reality and quiet despair. There was no place for any creative flight of imagination.
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