Skip to content

A Grammar of Motives
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

A Grammar of Motives Paperback - 1969

by Kenneth Burke

  • Used
  • Good

Description

University of California Press. Good. Good. Ship within 24hrs. Satisfaction 100% guaranteed. APO/FPO addresses supported
Used - Good
NZ$20.15
FREE Shipping to USA Standard delivery: 7 to 14 days
More Shipping Options
Ships from BooksRun (Pennsylvania, United States)

Details

  • Title A Grammar of Motives
  • Author Kenneth Burke
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition Later printing
  • Condition Used - Good
  • Pages 554
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher University of California Press, Berkeley
  • Date 1969-10-01
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 0520015444-11-1
  • ISBN 9780520015449 / 0520015444
  • Weight 1.64 lbs (0.74 kg)
  • Dimensions 8.99 x 6.03 x 1.37 in (22.83 x 15.32 x 3.48 cm)
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 69016741
  • Dewey Decimal Code 191

About BooksRun Pennsylvania, United States

Specializing in: Textbooks
Biblio member since 2016
Seller rating: This seller has earned a 4 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.

BooksRun.com - best place to buy, sell or rent cheap textbooks

Terms of Sale: 30 days return guarantee. 10% restocking fee applies to discretionary returns

Browse books from BooksRun

From the rear cover

"A Grammar of Motives," published in 1945, is the first volume of a gigantic trilogy, planned to include A Rhetoric of Motives and A Symbolic of Motives, which will be called something like On Human Relations. The aim of the whole series is no less than the comprehensive exploration of human motives and the forms of thought and expression built around them, and its ultimate object, expression in the epigraph: 'ad bellum purificandum, ' is to eliminate the whole world of conflict that can be eliminated through understanding. The method or key metaphor for the study is 'drama' or 'dramatism, ' and the basic terms of analysis are the dramatistic pentad: Act, Scene, Agent, Agency, and Purpose. The Grammar, which Burke confesses in the Introduction grew from a prolegomena of a few hundred words to nearly 200,000, is a consideration of the purely internal relationship of these five terms, 'their possibilities of transformation, their range of permutations and combinations'..."--Stanley Edgar Hyman, author of The Armed Vision

Categories

About the author

Kenneth Burke has been termed "simply the finest literary critic in the world, and perhaps the finest since Coleridge" (Stanley Edgar Hyman, The New Leader). Mr. Burke has published ten other works with the University of California Press: Towards a Better Life (1966); Language as Symbolic Action: Essays on Life, Literature, and Method (1966) Collected Poems, 1915-1967 (1968); The Complete White Oxen: Collected Short Fiction of Kenneth Burke (1968); A Grammar of Motives (1969); Permanence and Change: An Anatomy of Purpose (1984); The Philosophy of Literary Form (1974); A Rhetoric of Motives (1969); The Rhetoric of Religion: Studies in Logology (1970); and Attitudes Toward History, Third Edition (1984).