Discourse: A Review of the Liberal Arts, Volumen11Concordia College, 1968 |
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Página 79
... laughter . In De l'Art et du Beau ( 1841 ) , F. Lamennais® considers laughter " an image of evil , " self - love , and vindictive superiority ( although smiles , he con- cedes , sometimes express tender consideration for others ) ...
... laughter . In De l'Art et du Beau ( 1841 ) , F. Lamennais® considers laughter " an image of evil , " self - love , and vindictive superiority ( although smiles , he con- cedes , sometimes express tender consideration for others ) ...
Página 81
... laughter is struck " ( p . 140 ) . Laughter is thus " profoundly human , " expressing simultaneous consciousness of superiority and inferiority , while assert- ing a limited , but rebellious , freedom . Baudelaire sees the irrecon ...
... laughter is struck " ( p . 140 ) . Laughter is thus " profoundly human , " expressing simultaneous consciousness of superiority and inferiority , while assert- ing a limited , but rebellious , freedom . Baudelaire sees the irrecon ...
Página 82
... laughter . ) If laugh- ter expresses lost innocence , despair , and the burden of consciousness , as Baudelaire suggests , it may still retain a potentially aesthetic quality . In this connection , one recalls his own wry comment on ...
... laughter . ) If laugh- ter expresses lost innocence , despair , and the burden of consciousness , as Baudelaire suggests , it may still retain a potentially aesthetic quality . In this connection , one recalls his own wry comment on ...
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