"Quotes", The Educated Imagination (1963), Talk 3: Giants in Time
Context: In literature you don't just read one poem or novel after another, but enter into a complete world of which every work of literature forms part. This affects the writer as much as it does the reader.
“In literature you don't just read one poem or novel after another, but enter into a complete world of which every work of literature forms part. This affects the writer as much as it does the reader.”
The Educated Imagination (1963), Talk 3: Giants in Time
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Northrop Frye 137
Canadian literary critic and literary theorist 1912–1991Related quotes
The Educated Imagination (1963), Talk 3: Giants in Time
"Note on (toward) Bernard Shaw"
Variant translation: A book is not an autonomous entity: it is a relation, an axis of innumerable relations. One literature differs from another, be it earlier or later, not because of the texts but because of the way they are read: if I could read any page from the present time — this one, for instance — as it will be read in the year 2000, I would know what the literature of the year 2000 would be like.
Other Inquisitions (1952)
Truth of Intercourse.
Virginibus Puerisque and Other Papers (1881)
Source: At Large and at Small: Familiar Essays
“There isn't any distinction between a reader and a writer – reading is so much a part of it.”
Small talk: Dermot Healy, 2011
"Ten Books," The Southern Review (Autumn 1935) [p. 8]
Kipling, Auden & Co: Essays and Reviews 1935-1964 (1980)