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Northrop Frye on literature and society, 1936-1989 : unpublished papers

TLDR
Frye's collected works as mentioned in this paper span some fifty years of his long writing career, including essays, talks, reviews and papers, drawn from previously unpublished essays, talk, reviews, and papers; they show a farsightedness and range that has not been seen before.
Abstract
Drawn from previously unpublished essays, talks, reviews and papers, this volume of Northrop Frye's collected works spans some fifty years of his long writing career. The earliest item is a paper on The Canterbury Tales dating from Frye's student days at Oxford. The latest was written in 1989, on the occasion of his receiving his thirty-sixth honorary degree from the University of Bologna. The center-piece of the collection is Frye's lengthy and ambitious essay, .Rencontre. Intended as an introduction to a never-published anthology of English literature, it is unique in Frye's oeuvre, being the only example of a sustained, continuous encounter with an entire literary tradition. .Rencontre. is a masterwork in its own right. Other important essays include: .Shakespeare and the Comedy of Humours,. .The Literary Meaning of 'Archetype,'. and .Blake's Jerusalem. Frye was a profound and original thinker whose stature has not yet been fully realized. The writings collected here not only exemplify his extraordinary mind and elegant prose style - they show a far-sightedness and range that has not been seen before.

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'Vision' as a Key Term in Frye's Criticism

TL;DR: Frye was a critic of music, and he wrote a good deal about music, but of the second pair of terms, opsis is far more important when we look at the broad contours of his work as mentioned in this paper.