| The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07. |
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| [Gr.,=defense], literary work that defends, justifies, or clarifies an authors ideas or point of view. Unlike the ordinary use of the word, the literary use neither implies that wrong has been done nor expresses regret. The most famous ancient example, Platos Apology (3d cent. B.C.), presents Socrates defense of himself at his trial before the Athenian government. Sir Philip Sidneys Apologie for Poetrie and Defense of Poesie (both: 1580), which examine the art of poetry and its condition in England, apparently were written to justify the poets craft after it had been attacked by critics. A third famous example, Cardinal Newmans spiritual autobiography Apologia pro Vita sua (1864), was written to clarify the Cardinals views after they had been misrepresented in an essay by Charles Kingsley. |
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| | | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2007 Columbia University Press. |
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