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  2. Authority (textual criticism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Authority_(textual_criticism)

    The authority of a text is its reliability as a witness to the author's intentions. These intentions could be initial, medial or final, but intentionalist editors (most notably represented by Fredson Bowers and G. Thomas Tanselle editing school) generally attempt to retrieve final authorial intentions.

  3. Committed literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Committed_literature

    Committed literature (French: littérature engagée) can be defined as an approach of an author, poet, novelist, playwright or composer who commits their work to defend or assert an ethical, political, social, ideological or religious view, most often through their works but also can loosely be defined as being through their direct intervention as an "intellectual", in public affairs (Crowly ...

  4. Books of authority - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Books_of_authority

    Books of authority is a term used by legal writers to refer to a number of early legal textbooks that are excepted from the rule that textbooks (and all books other than statute or law report) are not treated as authorities by the courts of England and Wales and other common law jurisdictions.

  5. Bias in curricula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bias_in_curricula

    In a landmark book called "The Trouble with Textbooks," Gary A. Tobin and Dennis R. Ybarra show how some American textbooks contain anti-Semitic versions of Jewish history and faith, particularly in relation to Christianity and Islam. The authors found that some U.S. textbooks "tend to discredit the ties between Jews and the Land of Israel.

  6. Book censorship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_censorship

    Chilean soldiers burn books considered politically subversive in 1973, under Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship. Book censorship is the act of some authority taking measures to suppress ideas and information within a book. Censorship is "the regulation of free speech and other forms of entrenched authority". [1]

  7. Responsibilities and Other Poems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Responsibilities_and_Other...

    Responsibilities and a Play was printed and published by Yeats's sister, Elizabeth Corbet Yeats, at the Cuala Press in 1914. 400 copies were published. [1]The work contained thirty one poems and a new version of the play The Hour Glass, which was originally written in collaboration with Lady Gregory, but now presented in a new version.

  8. Authorial intent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Authorial_intent

    [8] [9] Hirsch contends that the meaning of a text is an ideal entity that exists in the author's mind, and the task of interpretation is to reconstruct and represent that intended meaning as accurately as possible. Hirsch proposes utilizing sources like the author's other writings, biographical information, and the historical/cultural context ...

  9. Authority - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Authority

    Authority, by contrast, depends on the acceptance by subordinates of the right of those above them to give them orders or directives. [11] [12] [13] The definition of authority in contemporary social science remains a matter of debate. Max Weber in his essay "Politics as a Vocation" (1919) divided legitimate authority into three types.