Texts arrive in the library through a variety of means and methods. Some countries make laws that demand a "legal deposit" of a publication in the national library. To say that a text has been accessioned is to record the order in which it was acquired by the library.
Texts arrive in the library through a variety of means and methods. Some countries make laws that demand a "legal deposit" of a publication in the national library. To say that a text has been accessioned is to record the order in which it was acquired by the library.
@ -103,4 +109,8 @@ Aristotle: "only creatures that have life can give voice, but not everything tha
In coughs, whispers, drawls, hisses, hesitations, laughs, stammers the voice \"meets and mingles with what it is not---indeed, it is, in the end, nothing more than this mingling
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The pathos and finesse of a voice that gives out, gives way, comes not from the virile figure it cuts against the ground of things, but rather from its suggestion of a *persona*---a being that has its being 'through sound', which is like our own bodies, rather than our dream of those bodies" (pg 144)
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"The pathos and finesse of a voice that gives out, gives way, comes not from the virile figure it cuts against the ground of things, but rather from its suggestion of a *persona*---a being that has its being 'through sound', which is like our own bodies, rather than our dream of those bodies" (pg 144)