ECOR 1010 Study Guide - Final Guide: Northrop Frye, Goneril, Men...

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Exam Overview
Quotes
Frye
Lecture 1 (The Motive for Metaphor):
o Ma a opare hat he does ith hat he a iagie eig doe.
Lecture 3 (Giants In Time):
o The orld of the iagiatio is a orld of upor or eroi beliefs if you believe
what you read in literature, you can, quite literally, believe in anything. 
Lecture 4 (The Keys to Dreamland):
o The world of literature is a world where there is no reality except that of the human
imagination. (40)
o
Lecture 6: (The Vocation of Eloquence): The fudaetal jo of the iagiatio i ordiar life,
then, is to produce, out of the society we have to live in, a vision of the society we want to live
i. (86)
Great Gatsby
For a hile these reeries proided an outlet for his imagination; they were a satisfactory hint
of the urealit of realit, a proise that the rok of the orld as fouded seurel o a fair’s
ig. 
King Lear
ALBANY
All friends shall taste
The wages of their virtue, and all foes
The cup of their deservings. (5.3.366-368)
Streetcar Named Desire
Blahe: I do’t at realis, I at agi. I tr to gie that to people. I do’t tell truth, I tell
hat ought to e truth.
Beloved
Ella: Whateer “ethe had doe, Ella did’t lie the idea of past errors takig possessio of the
preset.
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Document Summary

Lecture 1 (the motive for metaphor): (cid:862)ma(cid:374) (cid:272)a(cid:374) (cid:272)o(cid:373)pare (cid:449)hat he does (cid:449)ith (cid:449)hat he (cid:272)a(cid:374) i(cid:373)agi(cid:374)e (cid:271)ei(cid:374)g do(cid:374)e. (cid:863)(cid:894)(cid:1009)(cid:895) Lecture 3 (giants in time): (cid:862)the (cid:449)orld of the i(cid:373)agi(cid:374)atio(cid:374) is a (cid:449)orld of up(cid:271)or(cid:374) or e(cid:373)(cid:271)r(cid:455)o(cid:374)i(cid:272) beliefs if you believe what you read in literature, you can, quite literally, believe in anything. (cid:863) (cid:894)(cid:1007)(cid:1005)(cid:895) Lecture 4 (the keys to dreamland): (cid:862)the world of literature is a world where there is no reality except that of the human imagination. (cid:863) (40) Great gatsby (cid:862)for a (cid:449)hile these re(cid:448)eries pro(cid:448)ided an outlet for his imagination; they were a satisfactory hint of the u(cid:374)realit(cid:455) of realit(cid:455), a pro(cid:373)ise that the ro(cid:272)k of the (cid:449)orld (cid:449)as fou(cid:374)ded se(cid:272)urel(cid:455) o(cid:374) a fair(cid:455)"s (cid:449)i(cid:374)g. (cid:863) (cid:894)(cid:1005)(cid:1004)(cid:1004)(cid:895) The wages of their virtue, and all foes. Streetcar named desire: bla(cid:374)(cid:272)he: (cid:862)i do(cid:374)"t (cid:449)a(cid:374)t realis(cid:373), i (cid:449)a(cid:374)t (cid:373)agi(cid:272). I do(cid:374)"t tell truth, i tell (cid:449)hat ought to (cid:271)e truth. (cid:863)