On Literature
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On Literature (2003) is a book by Umberto Eco.
From the publisher:
- Italian literary theorist and novelist Umberto Eco includes nine essays in this title concerning: the general significance of literature; major authors of the Western canon; the poetic qualities of Dante's "Paradiso"; the style of the "Communist Manifesto"; Joyce's views on language; and more
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TOC
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On Some Functions of Literature
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A Reading of the Paradiso
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On the Style of The Communist Manifesto
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The Mists of Valois
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Wilde: Paradox and Aphorism
On Oscar Wilde, aphorisms and paradoxes
People would be happier if kings were philosophers and philosophers were kings (Plutarch).
If I wished to punish a province, I would have it governed by philosophers. (Frederick the Great)
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A Portrait of the Artist as Bachelor
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Between La Mancha and Babel
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Borges and My Anxiety of Influence
- "I made a list of titles, among which I liked best Blitiri ('blitiri,' like 'babazuf,' is a term used by the late Scholastics to indicate a word devoid of meaning)" --Eco on titles for The Name of the Rose
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On Camporesi: Blood, Body, Life
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On Symbolism
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On Style
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Les Sémaphores sous la Pluie
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The Flaws in the Form
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Intertextual Irony and Levels of Reading
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The Poetics and Us
Excerpt:
- "the fundamental problem of all philosophies of language, namely, whether metaphor is a departure from underlying literalness or the birthplace of every degree zero of writing."
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American Myth in Three Anti-American Generations
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The Power of Falsehood
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How I Write
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