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Benoit, William L. – Communication Education, 1984
Sketches the life of Isocrates, the father of eloquence, and discusses his views on rhetorical education. (PD)
Descriptors: Biographies, Classical Literature, Educational Philosophy, Greek Literature
Bermel, Albert – 1990
In a celebration of the expansiveness and inclusiveness of farce, this book describes the art form rather than defines it. Part 1 illustrates the nature of farce and its relationship to tragedy, comedy, and melodrama. Part 2 is a cumulative biography of farce, beginning with Greek and Roman writers and continuing through Shakespeare, Moliere, and…
Descriptors: Art Expression, Biographies, Comedy, Dramatics

Stone, Alan N. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1979
The present study, in an attempt to suggest factors which were at work in giving a man of such varied interests and predispositions the peculiar shape that they did, focuses upon the pathway that Wilson took during the 1920s, while questing for the mysteries of Axel's castle. (Author)
Descriptors: Authors, Background, Biographies, Individual Characteristics
Johnson-Feelings, Dianne – 1995
Taking off from the theme that makes Laurence Yep such a popular and beloved young adult author--the outsider seeking identity and connection in a strange, foreign world--this study of Yep's most important works shows how his experiences as a Chinese American in San Francisco fill his stories with firsthand knowledge of what it is like to be an…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Authors, Biographies, Chinese Americans

Fenton, William N. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 1981
Walter D. Edmunds created convincing characters of the Iroquois without pretending to know them. Carl Carmer was less interested in digging for the truth about Indians than in writing a story. Edmund Wilson perceived the Iroquois world view intuitively in his writing, overcoming any obstacle to get at the truth. (Author/LC)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indians, Authors, Beliefs