Burke on Psychodynamic Aesthetics: Forms that Help Us Cope

Abstract

A discontinuity is sometimes claimed to exist between Burke's early literary aesthetics and his later work. I argue for a continuity: already in Counter-Statement (1931), the formal¸ aesthetically powerful properties of literature are among those that, in his later formulations, enable texts to be "equipment for living" and "symbolic action."

Journal
KB Journal: The Journal of the Kenneth Burke Society
Published
2017-04
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