Wednesday, May 2, 2012

D.

D.


Barthelme's story is thus more accurately understood as an ingrained dissatisfaction with the world and with the ability of literature to find forms with which to understand and describe it (McKie).

14., G.

C.

C.

Daugherty, a former student of Barthelme's, whose research into Barthelme's childhood and early life is particularly impressive, makes much of the influence of his father, a modernist architect in Houston who believed in the transformative power of art to enrich the community (McKie).

16.,  9., D.

B.

B.

Barthelme's work incorporated illustrations, graphics, collages made of pictures cut from 19th-century magazines (McKie).

8., F.

Omega


Alpha, 17., J.

Alpha


Omega, 1., A.

17.

17.

"The aim of meditating about the world is finally to change the world" (Barthelme 24).

3.,  I.

endpoint

16.

16.

"Art is a true account of the activity of mind. Because consciousness...is always consciousness [italics] of something, art thinks ever of the world, cannot not think of the world, could not turn its back on the world even if it wished to" (Barthelme 23).

1.