请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 objective correlative
释义

objective correlativen.

Brit. /əbˌdʒɛktɪv kəˈrɛlətɪv/, U.S. /əbˌdʒɛktɪv kəˈrɛlədɪv/, /ɑbˌdʒɛktɪv kəˈrɛlədɪv/
Origin: Formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: objective adj., correlative n.
Etymology: < objective adj. + correlative n.
The physical equivalent or manifestation of an immaterial thing or abstract idea; spec. (and usually, following T. S. Eliot) the technique in art of representing or evoking a particular emotion by means of symbols, which become associated with and indicative of that emotion.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > figure of speech > [noun] > evoking emotion by physical symbols
objective correlative1919
1850 W. Allston Lect. Art, & Poems 16 No possible modification in the degrees or proportion of these elements [sc. air, earth, heat, water] can change the specific form of a plant... So, too, is the external world to the mind; which needs, also, as the condition of its manifestation, its objective correlative.
1909 Jrnl. Philos., Psychol. & Sci. Methods 6 587 An understanding which is merely the objective correlative of matter or causality.
1919 T. S. Eliot in Athenæum 26 Sept. 941/1 The only way of expressing emotion in the form of art is by finding an ‘objective correlative’; in other words, a set of objects, a situation, a chain of events which shall be the formula of that particular emotion; such that when the external facts, which must terminate in sensory experience, are given, the emotion is immediately evoked.
1946 Sewanee Rev. 54 301 In that Eliot proposes the objective correlative, ‘he accepts with the vast majority of his contemporaries the modern dogma that the artist is primarily concerned with emotion’.
1947 T. S. Eliot Milton 7 Two or three phrases of my coinage—like ‘objective correlative’—which have had a success in the world astonishing to their author.
1951 H. Kenner Poetry E. Pound viii. 66 It is easy to see why the objective correlative, the image as sensory equivalent of an emotion, the Aristotelian equation of a poem with an action, and Eliot's claim that emotions the poet has never experienced will serve his turn as well as familiar ones, should seem in such eyes impossibly muddle-headed.
1957 W. K. Wimsatt & C. Brooks Lit. Crit. 676 A realization that Winters' conception of poetry, like Eliot's, is ultimately ‘dramatic’ need not impugn the useful distinction between motive (the reason for an emotion) and objective correlative (the symbol of an emotion).
1964 J. B. Leishman Rilke's New Poems 9 An essentially expounding poet..might still be continuously engaged in a search for ever new ‘objective correlatives’ for old and unchanged convictions.
1995 Etc Montréal No. 30. 22/1 Tsai seems more interested in dissecting space as an objective correlative for character, an overarching emptiness in which solitary gestures and vacant expressions become all the more poignant.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2004; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
<
n.1850
随便看

 

英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/3/21 23:10:29