Issue 4.1

Overview

General Issue

Published: October 1970


See the issue summary and contents below.

 10 essays, totalling 142 pages

 $15.00 CAD


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This general issue of Mosaic covers a wide range of material that is loosely organized around the trajectory and influence of various myths, characters, and techniques of well-known authors, including Christopher Marlowe, John Updike, and Wallace Stevens. The issue also examines the significance of the bear in ancient and modern literatures, the advancements in science on the arts, and Eugène Fromentin’s “Dominique.”

Episodes in the History of Literary Bear

Harry G. Edinger

MacLeish's J.B. - Is It A Modern Job?

W. D. White

Reflections Upon the State of the Arts

Ernst Fischer

"Not Quite a Masterpiece" - Fromentin's Dominique Reconsidered

F. M. Latiolais

Wallace Stevens: Heritage and Influences

Doris L. Eder

An Overview of French Theories of Narrative Technique: 1630-1830

Elwyn F. Sterling

Theme and Technique In John Updike's Midpoint

Alice and Kenneth Hamilton

Sundrie Shapes, Committing Headdie Ryots, Incest, Rapes: Functions of Myth in Determining Narrative and Tone in Marlowe's Hero and Leander

S. Ann Collins

D.H. Lawrence - Some New Letters

Arnold Kettle

Our Garrison Mentality

Peter C. Noel-Bentley