Northrop Frye Quote

The fundamental act of criticism is a disinterested response to a work of literature in which all one's beliefs, engagements, commitments, prejudices, stampedings of pity and terror, are ordered to be quiet. We are now dealing with the imaginative, not the existential, with the "let this be," not with "this is," and no work of literature is better by virtue of what it says than any other work.


The Well-Tempered Critic, p. 140


The fundamental act of criticism is a disinterested response to a work of literature in which all one's beliefs, engagements, commitments,...

The fundamental act of criticism is a disinterested response to a work of literature in which all one's beliefs, engagements, commitments,...

The fundamental act of criticism is a disinterested response to a work of literature in which all one's beliefs, engagements, commitments,...

The fundamental act of criticism is a disinterested response to a work of literature in which all one's beliefs, engagements, commitments,...