Formalist critic<span> are the elements of form—style, structure, tone, imagery, etc.—that are found within the text. A primary goal for </span>formalist critics<span> to determine how such elements work together with the text's content to shape its effects upon readers.</span>
Answer:
Symbolism
Explanation:
This is not the full question as it is missing the options. They are as following:
- Neo-Impressionism
- Symbolism
- Impressionism
- the Pre-Raphaelites
<u>Gustave Moreau is one of the major figures of symbolism, as one of the painters that portended it. </u>
His work had Biblical themes but represented in symbolic aspects. <u>Desires, emotions, divinity, and mortality were painted in abstract forms and emblematic manner, full of different symbols</u>, sometimes even reminding us of surrealism that was yet to come.
Answer: The first principle of good communication is knowing your audience. This is where writing papers for class gets kind of weird. As Peter Elbow explains1:
When you write for a teacher you are usually swimming against the stream of natural communication. The natural direction of communication is to explain what you understand to someone who doesn’t understand it. But in writing an essay for a teacher your task is usually to explain what you are still engaged in trying to understand to someone who understands it better.
Often when you write for an audience of one, you write a letter or email. But college papers aren’t written like letters; they’re written like articles for a hypothetical group of readers that you don’t actually know much about. There’s a fundamental mismatch between the real-life audience and the form your writing takes.
Answer:
In any way
Explanation:
Some people might think the art is bad from one perspective, but some are going to think that it is good from the other perspective. Which might leave the artist in confusion and doubt.