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Cover; Table of Contents; 0. The Reference and the Study of Literature; 1. Poetics; 1.1. The acceptations of the term and the object of the discipline; 1.2. Poetics in antiquity; 1.2.1. Plato and the objection to poetry; 1.2.2. Aristotle, the father of poetics; 1.2.3. The poetics of the Latin space. Epistle to the Pisos; 1.2.4. The poetics of the Latin world. The treatise On the Sublime; 1.3. The survival of poetics during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance; 1.4. Between mimesis and poiesis. The 18th century
1.5. Poetics in the age of Romanticism 1.5.1. Wordsworth and Coleridge, the precursors of the poetics of Modernity; 1.6. Modern Poetics; 1.6.1. Russian Formalism; 1.6.2. New Criticism; 1.6.3. The Prague Linguistic Circle (1926-1948); 1.6.4. Roman Jakobson; 1.6.5. Structuralism; 1.6.6. Semiotics; 1.6.7. The mathematical poetics; 1.7. Conclusions; 2. Rhetoric; 2.1 The glory and oblivion of a millenary discipline; 2.2 Rhetoric in Antiquity; 2.2.1. Greek rhetoric; 2.2.2. Latin rhetoric; 2.2.3. Asianism
2.3. Aother type of rhetoric: sacred rhetoric 2.3.1. Sacred rhetoric in Romanian culture; 2.4. Rhetoric in the centuries which were not favorable to it; 2.5. The rhetorical system and some essential matters related to rhetoric; 2.6. The specificity of rhetoric and its reference; 2.7. Modern rhetoric and its two directions; 2.7.1. The philosophic neorhetoric; 2.7.2. Linguistic neorhetoric; 2.8. Conclusions; 3. Literary History; 3.1. The identity of the literary history and its relations to criticism and literary theory
3.2. The beginnings of the discipline the 19th century; 3.3. The conception of literary history in the 20th century; 3.4. Extrinsic and intrinsic; 3.5. Classification - the privileged method of classical literary history; 3.6. Literary history: a discipline of continuity?; 3.7. Diachronic and synchronic; 3.8. Reasoning - between relativism and absolutism; 3.9 The narrative literary history; 3.10. Revisions of the subject of literary history; 3.11. Conclusions; 4. The Variable Reference
1.5. Poetics in the age of Romanticism 1.5.1. Wordsworth and Coleridge, the precursors of the poetics of Modernity; 1.6. Modern Poetics; 1.6.1. Russian Formalism; 1.6.2. New Criticism; 1.6.3. The Prague Linguistic Circle (1926-1948); 1.6.4. Roman Jakobson; 1.6.5. Structuralism; 1.6.6. Semiotics; 1.6.7. The mathematical poetics; 1.7. Conclusions; 2. Rhetoric; 2.1 The glory and oblivion of a millenary discipline; 2.2 Rhetoric in Antiquity; 2.2.1. Greek rhetoric; 2.2.2. Latin rhetoric; 2.2.3. Asianism
2.3. Aother type of rhetoric: sacred rhetoric 2.3.1. Sacred rhetoric in Romanian culture; 2.4. Rhetoric in the centuries which were not favorable to it; 2.5. The rhetorical system and some essential matters related to rhetoric; 2.6. The specificity of rhetoric and its reference; 2.7. Modern rhetoric and its two directions; 2.7.1. The philosophic neorhetoric; 2.7.2. Linguistic neorhetoric; 2.8. Conclusions; 3. Literary History; 3.1. The identity of the literary history and its relations to criticism and literary theory
3.2. The beginnings of the discipline the 19th century; 3.3. The conception of literary history in the 20th century; 3.4. Extrinsic and intrinsic; 3.5. Classification - the privileged method of classical literary history; 3.6. Literary history: a discipline of continuity?; 3.7. Diachronic and synchronic; 3.8. Reasoning - between relativism and absolutism; 3.9 The narrative literary history; 3.10. Revisions of the subject of literary history; 3.11. Conclusions; 4. The Variable Reference