Home > Work > The Educated Imagination and Other Writings on Critical Theory 1933-1963
1 " In this perspective what I like or don’t like disappears, because there’s nothing left of me as a separate person: as a reader of literature I exist only as a representative of humanity as a whole. We "
― Northrop Frye , The Educated Imagination and Other Writings on Critical Theory 1933-1963
2 " This is an example of why the humanists have always insisted that you don’t learn to think wholly from one language: you learn to think better from linguistic conflict, from bouncing one language off another. "