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The story.one Bestseller Formula: Life is a story - story.one (the library of life - story.one) by Hannes Steiner 5.0 Stars (2 Reviews)    Price verified 25 minutes ago

Unleash the best-selling author in you - using the "Hannes Steiner story.one method" "There's a great book inside each of us, just waiting to conquer the world. And it's never been easier to publish it than today. So if you've ever dreamed of writing a book, I'm telling you: the perfect moment is now." Hannes Steiner "The story.one Bestseller Formula" takes you through the exciting adventure of coming up with ideas, publishing and marketing a book. What you will learn: • The Art of Storytelling: how to develop a compelling story readers can't put down. • Secrets of Marketing: how to effectively promote a book in today's climate. • Essential Knowledge: everything you need to know about writing a book and a bestseller. "The story.one Bestseller Formula" offers you not only the theory, but also practical instructions which you can put into action immediately. It is the destillation of story.one's visionary founder Hannes' many years of experience - which include twice ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 88 Pages (3,915 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: May 18th, 2024

Environmental Knowledge, Race, and African American Literature (Literatures, Cultures, and the Environment) by Matthias Klestil (Palgrave Macmillan) 4.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 4 hours ago

This open access book suggests new ways of reading nineteenth-century African American literature environmentally. Combining insights from ecocriticism, African American studies, and Foucauldian theory, Matthias Klestil examines forms of environmental knowledge in African American writing ranging from antebellum slave narratives and pamphlets to Charlotte Forten's journals, Booker T. Washington's autobiographies, and Charles W. Chesnutt's short fiction. The volume highlights how literary forms of environmental knowledge in the African American tradition were shaped by the histories of slavery and race, mainstream environmental writing traditions, and African American forms of expression and intertextuality. Turning to the Underground Railroad, debates over education and home-building, and the aesthetics of the pastoral and the georgic, Environmental Knowledge, Race, and African American Literature provides an original perspective on the African American ecoliterary traditionthat ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 440 Pages (864 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: May 16th, 2024

Precarious Times: Temporality and History in Modern German Culture (Signale: Modern German Letters, Cultures, and Thought) by Anne Fuchs (Cornell University Press and Cornell University Library) Price verified 5 minutes ago

In Precarious Times, Anne Fuchs explores how works of German literature, film, and photography reflect on the profound temporal anxieties precipitated by contemporary experiences of atomization, displacement, and fragmentation that bring about a loss of history and of time itself and that is peculiar to our current moment. The digital age places premiums on just-in-time deliveries, continual innovation, instantaneous connectivity, and around-the-clock availability. While some celebrate this 24/7 culture, others see it as profoundly destructive to the natural rhythm of day and night -- and to human happiness. Have we entered an era of a perpetual present that depletes the future and erodes our grasp of the past? Beginning its examination around 1900, when rapid modernization was accompanied by comparably intense reflection on changing temporal experience, Precarious Times provides historical depth and perspective to current debates on the "digital now." Expanding the modern discourse ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 406 Pages (2,948 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Mar 22nd, 2024

The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII, No. 357, October 30, 1886 by Various 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 3 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 55 Pages (195 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Mar 19th, 2024

Charles Dickens and the Image of Women by David K. Holbrook (NYU Press) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 2 hours ago

How successful is Dickens in his portrayal of women? Dickens has been represented (along with William Blake and D.H. Lawrence) as one who championed the life of the emotions often associated with the "feminine." Yet some of his most important heroines are totally submissive and docile. Dickens, of course, had to accept the conventions of his time. It is obvious, argues Holbrook, that Dickens idealized the father-daughter relationship, and indeed, any such relationship that was unsexual, like that of Tom Pinch and his sister—but why? Why, for example, is the image of woman so often associated with death, as in Great Expectations? Dickens's own struggles over relationships with women have been documented, but much less has been said about the unconscious elements behind these problems. Using recent developements in psychoanalytic object-relations theory, David Holbrook offers new insight into the way in which the novels of Dickens—particularly Bleak House, Little Dorrit, and Great ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 210 Pages (6,129 KB)
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Added: Feb 7th, 2024

Neither Fugitive nor Free: Atlantic Slavery, Freedom Suits, and the Legal Culture of Travel (America and the Long 19th Century Book 8) by Edlie L. Wong (NYU Press) Price verified 50 minutes ago

Part of the American Literatures Initiative Series Neither Fugitive nor Free draws on the freedom suit as recorded in the press and court documents to offer a critically and historically engaged understanding of the freedom celebrated in the literary and cultural histories of transatlantic abolitionism. Freedom suits involved those enslaved valets, nurses, and maids who accompanied slaveholders onto free soil. Once brought into a free jurisdiction, these attendants became informally free, even if they were taken back to a slave jurisdiction -- at least according to abolitionists and the enslaved themselves. In order to secure their freedom formally, slave attendants or others on their behalf had to bring suit in a court of law. Edlie Wong critically recuperates these cases in an effort to reexamine and redefine the legal construction of freedom, will, and consent. This study places such historically central anti-slavery figures as Frederick Douglass, Olaudah Equiano, and William ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 350 Pages (4,069 KB)
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Added: Feb 6th, 2024

An Imperialist Love Story: Desert Romances and the War on Terror by Amira Jarmakani (NYU Press) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 4 hours ago

A curious figure stalks the pages of a distinct subset of mass-market romance novels, aptly called "desert romances." Animalistic yet sensitive, dark and attractive, the desert prince or sheikh emanates manliness and raw, sexual power. In the years since September 11, 2001, the sheikh character has steadily risen in popularity in romance novels, even while depictions of Arab masculinity as backward and violent in nature have dominated the cultural landscape. An Imperialist Love Story contributes to the broader conversation about the legacy of orientalist representations of Arabs in Western popular culture. Combining close readings of novels, discursive analysis of blogs and forums, and interviews with authors, Jarmakani explores popular investments in the war on terror by examining the collisions between fantasy and reality in desert romances. Focusing on issues of security, freedom, and liberal multiculturalism, she foregrounds the role that desire plays in contemporary formations ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 291 Pages (3,046 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Feb 6th, 2024

Undisciplined: Science, Ethnography, and Personhood in the Americas, 1830-1940 (America and the Long 19th Century Book 9) by Nihad Farooq (NYU Press) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 55 minutes ago

In the 19th century, personhood was a term of regulation and discipline in which slaves, criminals, and others, could be "made and unmade." Yet it was precisely the fraught, uncontainable nature of personhood that necessitated its constant legislation, wherein its meaning could be both contested and controlled. Examining scientific and literary narratives, Nihad M. Farooq's Undisciplined encourages an alternative consideration of personhood, one that emerges from evolutionary and ethnographic discourse. Moving chronologically from 1830 to 1940, Farooq explores the scientific and cultural entanglements of Atlantic travelers in and beyond the Darwin era, and invites us to attend more closely to the consequences of mobility and contact on disciplines and persons. Bringing together an innovative group of readings -- from field journals, diaries, letters, and testimonies to novels, stage plays, and audio recordings -- Farooq advocates for a reconsideration of science, personhood, and the ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 264 Pages (3,630 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Feb 6th, 2024

Ethnology and Empire: Languages, Literature, and the Making of the North American Borderlands (America and the Long 19th Century Book 6) by Robert Lawrence Gunn (NYU Press) Price verified 3 hours ago

Winner, The Early American Literature Book Prize Ethnology and Empire tells stories about words and ideas, and ideas about words that developed in concert with shifting conceptions about Native peoples and western spaces in the nineteenth-century United States. Contextualizing the emergence of Native American linguistics as both a professionalized research discipline and as popular literary concern of American culture prior to the U.S.-Mexico War, Robert Lawrence Gunn reveals the manner in which relays between the developing research practices of ethnology, works of fiction, autobiography, travel narratives, Native oratory, and sign languages gave imaginative shape to imperial activity in the western borderlands. In literary and performative settings that range from the U.S./Mexico borderlands to the Great Lakes region of Tecumseh's Pan-Indian Confederacy and the hallowed halls of learned societies in New York and Philadelphia, Ethnology and Empire models an interdisciplinary ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 258 Pages (6,659 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Feb 6th, 2024

Critical Rhetorics of Race (Critical Cultural Communication Book 12) by Kent A. Ono (NYU Press) 4.3 Stars (5 Reviews)    Price verified 2 hours ago

According to many pundits and cultural commentators, the U.S. is enjoying a post-racial age, thanks in part to Barack Obama's rise to the presidency. This high gloss of optimism fails, however, to recognize that racism remains ever present and alive, spread by channels of media and circulated even in colloquial speech in ways that can be difficult to analyze. In this groundbreaking collection edited by Michael G. Lacy and Kent A. Ono, scholars seek to examine this complicated and contradictory terrain while moving the field of communication in a more intellectually productive direction. An outstanding group of contributors from a range of academic backgrounds challenges traditional definitions and applications of rhetoric. From the troubling media representations of black looters after Hurricane Katrina and rhetoric in news coverage about the Columbine and Virginia Tech massacres to cinematic representations of race in Crash, Blood Diamond, and Quentin Tarantino's films, these essays ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 326 Pages (2,493 KB)
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Added: Feb 6th, 2024

Green Voices: Defending Nature and the Environment in American Civic Discourse (SUNY Press Open Access) by Richard D. Besel (SUNY Press) Price verified 11 hours ago

The written works of nature's leading advocates -- from Charles Sumner and John Muir to Rachel Carson and President Jimmy Carter, to name a few -- have been the subject of many texts, but their speeches remain relatively unknown or unexamined. Green Voices aims to redress this situation. After all, when it comes to the leaders, heroes, and activists of the environmental movement, their speeches formed part of the fertile earth from which uniquely American environmental expectations, assumptions, and norms germinated and grew. Despite having in common a definitively rhetorical focus, the contributions in this book reflect a variety of methods and approaches. Some concentrate on a single speaker and a single speech. Others look at several speeches. Some are historical in orientation, while others are more theoretical. In other words, this collection examines the broad sweep of US environmental history from the perspective of our most famous and influential environmental figures. This ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 416 Pages (4,960 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Jan 16th, 2024

Theresa Marchmont or, the Maid of Honour by Mrs. (Catherine Grace Frances) Gore 3.3 Stars (8 Reviews)    Price verified 5 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 62 Pages (130 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Dec 31st, 2023

Afropolitan Horizons: Essays toward a Literary Anthropology of Nigeria by Ulf Hannerz (Berghahn Books) 4.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 9 hours ago

Nigeria is a country shaped by internal diversity and transnational connections, past and present. Leading Nigerian writers from Chinua Achebe, Amos Tutuola and Wole Soyinka to Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Teju Cole have portrayed these Nigerian issues, and have also written about some of the momentous events in Nigerian history. Afropolitan Horizons discusses their work alongside other novelists and commentators, as well as describing the ways in which Nigeria has appeared in foreign news reporting. It is all interwoven with the author's own anthropological field research in a town in Central Nigeria.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 335 Pages (841 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Dec 19th, 2023

Nimble Tongues: Studies in Literary Translingualism (Comparative Cultural Studies) by Steven G. Kellman (Purdue University Press) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified one hour ago

Nimble Tongues is a collection of essays that continues Steven G. Kellman's work in the fertile field of translingualism, focusing on the phenomenon of switching languages. A series of investigations and reflections rather than a single thesis, the collection is perhaps more akin in its aims -- if not accomplishment -- to George Steiner's Extraterritorial: Papers on Literature and the Language Revolution or Umberto Eco's Travels in Hyperreality. Topics covered include the significance of translingualism; translation and its challenges; immigrant memoirs; the autobiographies that Ariel Dorfman wrote in English and Spanish, respectively; the only feature film ever made in Esperanto; Francesca Marciano, an Italian who writes in English; Jhumpa Lahiri, who has abandoned English for Italian; Ilan Stavans, a prominent translingual author and scholar; Hugo Hamilton, a writer who grew up torn among Irish, German, and English; Antonio Ruiz-Camacho, a Mexican who writes in English; and the ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 279 Pages (2,166 KB)
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Added: Nov 30th, 2023

Shakespeare's Bones by C. M. (Clement Mansfield) Ingleby 5.0 Stars (2 Reviews)    Price verified 2 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 38 Pages (152 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Nov 28th, 2023

Data Information Literacy: Librarians, Data and the Education of a New Generation of Researchers (Purdue Information Literacy Handbooks) by Jake Carlson (Purdue University Press) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 3 hours ago

Given the increasing attention to managing, publishing, and preserving research datasets as scholarly assets, what competencies in working with research data will graduate students in STEM disciplines need to be successful in their fields? And what role can librarians play in helping students attain these competencies? In addressing these questions, this book articulates a new area of opportunity for librarians and other information professionals, developing educational programs that introduce graduate students to the knowledge and skills needed to work with research data. The term "data information literacy" has been adopted with the deliberate intent of tying two emerging roles for librarians together. By viewing information literacy and data services as complementary rather than separate activities, the contributors seek to leverage the progress made and the lessons learned in each service area. The intent of the publication is to help librarians cultivate strategies and ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 284 Pages (3,328 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Nov 23rd, 2023

Proofs of Genius: Collected Editions from the American Revolution to the Digital Age (Editorial Theory And Literary Criticism) by Amanda Gailey (University of Michigan Press) 4.7 Stars (4 Reviews)    Price verified 3 hours ago

Proofs of Genius: Collected Editions from the American Revolution to the Digital Age is the first extensive study of the collected edition as an editorial genre within American literary history. Unlike editions of an author's "selected works" or thematic anthologies, which clearly indicate the presence of non-authorial editorial intervention, collected editions have typically been arranged to imply an unmediated documentary completeness. By design, the collected edition obscures its own role in shaping the cultural reception of the author. In Proofs of Genius, Amanda Gailey argues that decisions to re-edit major authorial corpora are acts of canon-formation in miniature that indicate more foundational shifts in the way a culture views its literature and itself. By combining a theoretically-informed approach with a broad historical view of collected editions from the late eighteenth century to the present (including the rise of digital editions), Gailey fills a gap in the textual ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 172 Pages (4,966 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Nov 19th, 2023

Ideal Commonwealths by Various 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 30 minutes ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 230 Pages (592 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Nov 3rd, 2023

Political Pamphlets by George Saintsbury 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 3 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 184 Pages (323 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Oct 6th, 2023

The Vitamine Manual by Walter H. Eddy 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 2 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 74 Pages (320 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Oct 5th, 2023

Fanny, the Flower-Girl, or, Honesty Rewarded by Selina Bunbury 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 25 minutes ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 72 Pages (228 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Oct 5th, 2023

Two Years Ago, Volume I by Charles Kingsley 5.0 Stars (2 Reviews)    Price verified 25 minutes ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 334 Pages (754 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Oct 5th, 2023

Women in German Expressionism: Gender, Sexuality, Activism (Social History, Popular Culture, And Politics In Germany) by Anke Finger (University of Michigan Press) 5.0 Stars (3 Reviews)    Price verified 25 minutes ago

This collection, for the first time, explores women's self-conceptions and representations of women's and gender roles in society in their own Expressionist works. How did women approach themes commonly considered to be characteristic of the Expressionist movement, and did they address other themes or aesthetics and styles not currently represented in the canon? Women in German Expressionism centers its analysis on gender, together with difference, ethnicity, intersectionality, and identity, to approach artworks and texts in more nuanced ways, engaging solidly established theoretical and sociohistorical approaches that enhance and update our understanding of the material under investigation. It moves beyond the masculine, "New Man," viewpoint so firmly associated with German Expressionism and examines alternative, critical, and divergent interpretations of the changing world at the time. This collection seeks to broaden the theorization, scholarship, and reception of German ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 372 Pages (2,662 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Sep 4th, 2023

The Craft of Poetry: Dialogues on Minimal Interpretation by Derek Attridge (Routledge) 4.4 Stars (26 Reviews)    Price verified 3 hours ago

This book presents an innovative format for poetry criticism that its authors call "dialogical poetics." This approach shows that readings of poems, which in academic literary criticism often look like a product of settled knowledge, are in reality a continual negotiation between readers. But Derek Attridge and Henry Staten agree to rein in their own interpretive ingenuity and "minimally interpret" poems - reading them with careful regard for what the poem can be shown to actually say, in detail and as a whole, from opening to closure. Based on a series of emails, the book explores a number of topics in the reading of poetry, including historical and intellectual context, modernist difficulty, the role of criticism, and translation. This highly readable book will appeal to anyone who enjoys poetry, offering an inspiring resource for students whilst also mounting a challenge to some of the approaches to poetry currently widespread in the academy.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 168 Pages (3,616 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Aug 31st, 2023

Historical Miniatures by August Strindberg 3.9 Stars (5 Reviews)    Price verified 2 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 382 Pages (589 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Aug 29th, 2023

Notes and Queries, Number 23, April 6, 1850 by Various 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified one hour ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 45 Pages (139 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Aug 22nd, 2023

Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 15, No. 90, June, 1875 by Various 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 2 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 206 Pages (569 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Aug 21st, 2023

Moral by Ludwig Thoma 5.0 Stars (2 Reviews)    Price verified 55 minutes ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 112 Pages (236 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Aug 21st, 2023

Druidry for Beginners: Discover Herbs, Ogham, Rituals, Divination, and Druid Tarot Reading in the Ancient Wisdom of Druidry by Alfreda J. Anderson 3.8 Stars (5 Reviews)    Price verified one hour ago

Druidry for Beginners The book Druidry for Beginners tells you everything you need to know about Druidry, an ancient Celtic spiritual practice. Alfreda J. Anderson, an author who is also an experienced druid, wrote this book. It gives a clear overview of this powerful and spiritual practice. From its origins and history to its gods, rituals, and modern uses, Druidry for Beginners is a great book for anyone who wants to learn more about this ancient and deep religion. The first part of the book tells the reader about Druidry's ancient Celtic roots and how it has been changed for the modern world. It talks about how Druidry is a spiritual practice that tries to honor the Earth and its energies. It also talks about how it tries to teach people to have a deep respect for nature and how everything is connected. Alfreda J. Anderson also looks at Druidry's theological and philosophical underpinnings , as well as its rituals, holidays, and festivals. Druidry for Beginners gives an in-depth ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 92 Pages (3,513 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Aug 19th, 2023

The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 12, No. 326, August 9, 1828 by Various 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 2 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 36 Pages (146 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Aug 19th, 2023

Shipwrecked: Disaster and Transformation in Homer, Shakespeare, Defoe, and the Modern World by James Morrison (University of Michigan Press) Price verified 5 hours ago

Shipwrecked: Disaster and Transformation in Homer, Shakespeare, Defoe, and the Modern World presents the first comparative study of notable literary shipwrecks from the past four thousand years, focusing on Homer's Odyssey, Shakespeare's The Tempest, and Defoe's Robinson Crusoe. James V. Morrison considers the historical context as well as the "triggers" (such as the 1609 Bermuda shipwreck) that inspired some of these works, and modern responses such as novels (Golding's Lord of the Flies, Coetzee's Foe, and Gordon's First on Mars, a science fiction version of the Crusoe story), movies, television (Forbidden Planet, Cast Away, and Lost), and the poetry and plays of Caribbean poets Derek Walcott and Aimé Césaire. The recurrent treatment of shipwrecks in the creative arts demonstrates an enduring fascination with this archetypal scene: a shipwreck survivor confronting the elements. It is remarkable, for example, that the characters in the 2004 television show Lost share so many ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 256 Pages (7,239 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Aug 7th, 2023

Revisiting Renoir, Manet and Degas: Impressionist Figure Paintings in Contemporary Anglophone Art Fiction (Schweizer Anglistische Arbeiten (SAA) Book ... by Lyutsiya Staub (Narr Francke Attempto Verlag) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 11 hours ago

This work analyses the relationship between visual art and contemporary art fiction by addressing the problem of the ekphrastic re-presentation and re-interpretation of an Impressionist figure painting through its composition, selected details of the painting and allusion to specific techniques used in the process of creating the masterpiece based on the examples of the following novels: Luncheon of the Boating Party (LOTBP) by Susan Vreeland (2007), Mademoiselle Victorine (MV) by Debra Finerman (2007), With Violets (WV) by Elizabeth Robards (2008), Dancing for Degas (DFD) by Kathryn Wagner (2010) and The Painted Girls (TPG) by Cathy Marie Buchanan (2013).

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 341 Pages (10,253 KB)
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Added: Aug 2nd, 2023

The Challenge of Change (Swiss Papers in English Language and Literature (SPELL) Book 36) by Margaret Tudeau-Clayton (Narr Dr. Gunter) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 25 minutes ago

Change is a powerful idea which inspires hope and fear, excitement and dread. From the panta rhei of Heraclitus to Darwinian evolutionary theory, nobel laureate Bob Dylans The times they are a-changin, the Obama campaign slogan Change we can believe in, and the current advertising mantra change is good, it recurs as a challenge to the status quo. The present volume contains essays on the topic of change in English language, literature and culture. Some are based on papers presented at the 2017 SAUTE conference, which took place at the Université de Neuchâtel, while others have been specially written for this volume.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 267 Pages (4,091 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Aug 1st, 2023

Scientific American Supplement, No. 360, November 25, 1882 by Various Price verified 9 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 102 Pages (294 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Jul 7th, 2023

Empire and Environment: Ecological Ruin in the Transpacific by Jeffrey Santa Ana (University of Michigan Press) Price verified one hour ago

Empire and Environment argues that histories of imperialism, colonialism, militarism, and global capitalism are integral to understanding environmental violence in the transpacific region. The collection draws its rationale from the imbrication of imperialism and global environmental crisis, but its inspiration from the ecological work of activists, artists, and intellectuals across the transpacific region. Taking a postcolonial, ecocritical approach to confronting ecological ruin in an age of ecological crises and environmental catastrophes on a global scale, the collection demonstrates how Asian North American, Asian diasporic, and Indigenous Pacific Island cultural expressions critique a de-historicized sense of place, attachment, and belonging. In addition to its thirteen chapters from scholars who span the Pacific, each part of this volume begins with a poem by Craig Santos Perez. The volume also features a foreword by Macarena Gómez-Barris and an afterword by Priscilla Wald.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 321 Pages (4,975 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Jun 29th, 2023

Imagining Iberia in English and Castilian Medieval Romance by Emily Houlik-Ritchey (University of Michigan Press) 3.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 11 hours ago

Imagining Iberia in English and Castilian Medieval Romance offers a broad disciplinary, linguistic, and national focus by analyzing the literary depiction of Iberia in two European vernaculars that have rarely been studied together. Emily Houlik-Ritchey employs an innovative comparative methodology that integrates the understudied Castilian literary tradition with English literature. Intentionally departing from the standard "influence and transmission" approach, Imagining Iberia challenges that standard discourse with modes drawn from Neighbor Theory to reveal and navigate the relationships among three selected medieval romance traditions. This welcome volume uncovers an overemphasis in prior scholarship on the relevance of "crusading" agendas in medieval romance, and highlights the shared investments of Christians and Muslims in Iberia's political, creedal, cultural, and mercantile networks in the Mediterranean world.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 249 Pages (1,992 KB)
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Added: Jun 17th, 2023

Wittgenstein's Novels by Martin Klebes (Routledge) 4.5 Stars (20 Reviews)    Price verified 25 minutes ago

Analyzing features of Wittgenstein's philosophical work and including in-depth textual analyses, this study investigates the impact of Ludwig Wittgenstein's work on contemporary German and French novelists. Drawing upon aesthetics, architectural history, philosophy of science, and photography, the book seeks to explain why references both to Wittgenstein as a person, as well as to his work are more pervasive than other equally renowned twentieth century philosophers and asks why some authors such as Händler and Roubaud, are less well-known and only partially translated into English.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 314 Pages (12,749 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: May 29th, 2023

Deus e o diabo no humor das mulheres: contos, casos e crônicas com humor escritos por mulheres (Portuguese Edition) by Alba Valeria Tinoco Alves Silva (SciELO - EDUFBA) 4.4 Stars (531 Reviews)    Price verified 3 hours ago

Com o intuito de problematizar o lugar da mulher na produção humorística, a autora tece considerações a respeito da relação mulher/humor, sob diversas óticas do pensamento, como a psicanálise, a antropologia, a filosofia e a linguística. O livro surge com a premissa de descontruir a lógica de que a via cômica é uma forma de expressão exclusivamente masculina.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 200 Pages (1,298 KB)
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Added: May 13th, 2023

The Worlding of Arabic Literature: Language, Affect, and the Ethics of Translatability by Anna Ziajka Stanton (Fordham University Press) 5.0 Stars (3 Reviews)    Price verified 25 minutes ago

Critics have long viewed translating Arabic literature into English as an ethically fraught process of mediating between two wholly incommensurable languages, cultures, and literary traditions. Today, Arabic literature is no longer "embargoed" from Anglophone cultural spaces, as Edward Said once famously claimed that it was. As Arabic literary works are translated into English in ever-greater numbers, what alternative model of translation ethics can account for this literature's newfound readability in the hegemonic language of the world literary system? The Worlding of Arabic Literature argues that an ethical translation of a work of Arabic literature is one that transmits the literariness of the source text by engaging new populations of readers via a range of embodied and sensory effects. The book proposes that when translation is conceived of not as an exchange of semantic content but as a process of converting the affective forms of one language into those of another, ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 228 Pages (40 KB)
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Added: May 4th, 2023

Acquired Alterity: Migration, Identity, and Literary Nationalism (New Interventions in Japanese Studies Book 3) by Edward Mack (University of California Press) 4.3 Stars (6 Reviews)    Price verified 9 hours ago

A free open access ebook is available upon publication. Learn more at www.luminosoa.org. This is the first book-length study in English of the Japanese-language literary activities of early Japanese migrants to Brazil. It provides a detailed history of Japanese-language bookstores, serialized newspaper fiction, original creative works, and critical apparatuses that existed in Brazil prior to World War II. This case study of the reading and writing of one diasporic population challenges the dominant mode of literary study, in which texts are often explicitly or implicitly understood through a framework of ethno-nationalism. Self-representations by writers in the diaspora reveal flaws in this prevailing framework through what Edward Mack calls "acquired alterity," in which expectations about the stability of ethnic identity are subverted in surprising ways. Acquired Alterity encourages a reconsideration of the ramifications (and motivations) of cultural analyses of texts and the ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 388 Pages (17,661 KB)
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Added: Mar 25th, 2023

Golden Days for Boys and Girls, Vol. XIII, Nov. 28, 1891 by Various 2.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 2 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 153 Pages (431 KB)
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Added: Mar 17th, 2023

New York Times Current History; The European War, Vol 2, No. 3, June, 1915 April-September, 1915 by Various Price verified 3 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 538 Pages (503 KB)
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Added: Mar 15th, 2023

Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 159, November 10, 1920 by Various Price verified one minute ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 61 Pages (154 KB)
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Added: Mar 14th, 2023

The Poets and Poetry of Cecil County, Maryland by Various Price verified one hour ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 292 Pages (528 KB)
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Added: Mar 12th, 2023

The Lives of Machines: The Industrial Imaginary in Victorian Literature and Culture by Tamara S. Ketabgian (University of Michigan Press) 5.0 Stars (2 Reviews)    Price verified 2 hours ago

"The Lives of Machines is intelligent, closely argued, and persuasive, and puts forth a contention that will unsettle the current consensus about Victorian attitudes toward the machine." ---Jay Clayton, Vanderbilt University Today we commonly describe ourselves as machines that "let off steam" or feel "under pressure." The Lives of Machines investigates how Victorian technoculture came to shape this language of human emotion so pervasively and irrevocably and argues that nothing is more intensely human and affecting than the nonhuman. Tamara Ketabgian explores the emergence of a modern and more mechanical view of human nature in Victorian literature and culture. Treating British literature from the 1830s to the 1870s, this study examines forms of feeling and community that combine the vital and the mechanical, the human and the nonhuman, in surprisingly hybrid and productive alliances. Challenging accounts of industrial alienation that still persist, the author defines mechanical ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 420 Pages (1,541 KB)
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Added: Mar 8th, 2023

Writing With Soft Worldbuilding: Write Amazing Books With the Easy Way of Worldbuilding (Writing Series) by Hans Arthur 4.7 Stars (5 Reviews)    Price verified 5 hours ago

Worldbuilding breathes life into a story that would otherwise be monotonous. It is one of the most essential points in determining whether a book or film is successful. Some books and movies examined here are: The Hobbit, The Hunger Games, Harry Potter, and Spirited Away. Fictional worlds are the perfect place to lose yourself, whether it be a fantastical dreamland or an alternate universe. But to captivate an audience, you need the right tools to set their imaginations free. And in Writing with Soft Worldbuilding, you will be given those tools to write amazing books using the easy, unique way of worldbuilding. If you want to create a story that will live inside your readers' minds forever, then you need to read this book. Inside Writing with Soft Worldbuilding, you will discover: • The types of worldbuilding • How to work with setting and tone • How to advance a story with characters and dialogue • The elements of a great plot and pacing • The benefits of hard ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 94 Pages (281 KB)
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Added: Feb 25th, 2023

The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 13, No. 366, April 18, 1829 by Various Price verified 5 minutes ago

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Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 40 Pages (156 KB)
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Added: Feb 7th, 2023

Collecting Lives: Critical Data Narrative as Modernist Aesthetic in Early Twentieth-Century U.S. Literatures (Digital Culture Books) by Elizabeth Rodrigues (University of Michigan Press) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 25 minutes ago

On a near-daily basis, data is being used to narrate our lives. Categorizing algorithms drawn from amassed personal data to assign narrative destinies to individuals at crucial junctures, simultaneously predicting and shaping the paths of our lives. Data is commonly assumed to bring us closer to objectivity, but the narrative paths these algorithms assign seem, more often than not, to replicate biases about who an individual is and could become. While the social effects of such algorithmic logics seem new and newly urgent to consider, Collecting Lives looks to the late nineteenth and early twentieth century U.S. to provide an instructive prehistory to the underlying question of the relationship between data, life, and narrative. Rodrigues contextualizes the application of data collection to human selfhood in order to uncover a modernist aesthetic of data that offers an alternative to the algorithmic logic pervading our sense of data's revelatory potential. Examining the work of W. E. ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 238 Pages (1,140 KB)
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Added: Feb 3rd, 2023

Different Dispatches: Journalism in American Modernist Prose (Literary Criticism and Cultural Theory) by David T. Humphries (Routledge) 4.6 Stars (17 Reviews)    Price verified 55 minutes ago

In "Different Dispatches", David Humphries brings together in a new way a diverse group of well-known American writers of the inter-war period including: Willa Cather, Sherwood Anderson, Ernest Hemmingway, Zora Neale Hurston, James Agee and Robert Penn Warren. He demonstrates how these writers engage journalism in creating innovative texts that address mass culture as well as underlying cultural conditions. The book will be of interest to readers approaching these well-known authors for the first time or for scholars grappling with larger issues of cultural production and reception.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 257 Pages (1,756 KB)
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Added: Nov 29th, 2022

Literature, Ethics, Morality: American Studies Perspectives (Swiss Papers in English Language and Literature (SPELL) Book 32) by Ridvan Askin (Narr Francke Attempto Verlag) 5.0 Stars (2 Reviews)    Price verified 25 minutes ago

This timely volume explores a wealth of North American literary texts that engage with moral and ethical dilemmas. It ranges from William Dean Howells's and Henry James's realist novels to Edward Sapir's intermedial poems, and from John Muir's unpublished letters and journal of his 1893 tour of the Swiss Alps to Rudy Wiebe's A Discovery of Strangers and the poetry of Robert Lowell. Many of the contributions also critically engage with and re?ect on some of the most prominent voices in contemporary theoretical debates about ethics such as Ludwig Wittgenstein, Jürgen Habermas, Em-manuel Levinas, Axel Honneth, Hannah Arendt, John Rawls, and Julia Kristeva. This volume thus aptly covers the panoply of contemporary ethical and moral interventions while at the same time providing distinctively American Studies perspectives.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 238 Pages (3,615 KB)
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Added: Nov 9th, 2022

Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 102, January 9, 1892 by Various 4.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified one hour ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 31 Pages (130 KB)
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Added: Oct 31st, 2022

Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, August 15, 1917 by Various Price verified 2 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 41 Pages (152 KB)
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Added: Oct 31st, 2022

Punch, Or The London Charivari, Volume 102, January 30, 1892 by Various 1.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 5 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 27 Pages (121 KB)
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Added: Oct 31st, 2022

Dreams for Dead Bodies: Blackness, Labor, and the Corpus of American Detective Fiction (Class : Culture) by Miriam Michelle Robinson (University of Michigan Press) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 2 hours ago

Dreams for Dead Bodies: Blackness, Labor, and the Corpus of American Detective Fiction offers new arguments about the origins of detective fiction in the United States, tracing the lineage of the genre back to unexpected texts and uncovering how authors such as Edgar Allan Poe, Mark Twain, Pauline Hopkins, and Rudolph Fisher made use of the genre's puzzle-elements to explore the shifting dynamics of race and labor in America. The author constructs an interracial genealogy of detective fiction to create a nuanced picture of the ways that black and white authors appropriated and cultivated literary conventions that coalesced in a recognizable genre at the turn of the twentieth century. These authors tinkered with detective fiction's puzzle-elements to address a variety of historical contexts, including the exigencies of chattel slavery, the erosion of working-class solidarities by racial and ethnic competition, and accelerated mass production. Dreams for Dead Bodies demonstrates ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 264 Pages (929 KB)
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Added: Oct 31st, 2022

Authoring the Self: Self-Representation, Authorship, and the Print Market in British Poetry from Pope through Wordsworth (Literary Criticism and ... by Scott Hess (Routledge) 4.2 Stars (3 Reviews)    Price verified 9 hours ago

Drawing upon historicist and cultural studies approaches to literature, this book argues that the Romantic construction of the self emerged out of the growth of commercial print culture and the expansion and fragmentation of the reading public beginning in eighteenth-century Britain. Arguing for continuity between eighteenth-century literature and the rise of Romanticism, this groundbreaking book traces the influence of new print market conditions on the development of the Romantic poetic self.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Size: 1,205 KB
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Added: Oct 30th, 2022

Bandits in Print: "The Water Margin" and the Transformations of the Chinese Novel by Scott W. Gregory (Cornell East Asia Series) 2.5 Stars (2 Reviews)    Price verified 2 hours ago

Bandits in Print examines the world of print in early modern China, focusing on the classic novel The Water Margin (Shuihu zhuan). Depending on which edition a reader happened upon, The Water Margin could offer vastly different experiences, a characteristic of the early modern Chinese novel genre and the shifting print culture of the era. Scott W. Gregory argues that the traditional novel is best understood as a phenomenon of print. He traces the ways in which this particularly influential novel was adapted and altered in the early modern era as it crossed the boundaries of elite and popular, private and commercial, and civil and martial. Moving away from ultimately unanswerable questions about authorship and urtext, Gregory turns instead to the editor-publishers who shaped the novel by crafting their own print editions. By examining the novel in its various incarnations, Bandits in Print shows that print is not only a stabilizing force on literary texts; in particular circumstances ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 246 Pages (9,100 KB)
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Added: Oct 28th, 2022

Heaven's Interpreters: Women Writers and Religious Agency in Nineteenth-Century America by Ashley Reed (Cornell University Press) 3.4 Stars (3 Reviews)    Price verified 2 hours ago

In Heaven's Interpreters, Ashley Reed reveals how nineteenth-century American women writers transformed the public sphere by using the imaginative power of fiction to craft new models of religious identity and agency. Women writers of the antebellum period, Reed contends, embraced theological concepts to gain access to the literary sphere, challenging the notion that theological discourse was exclusively oppressive and served to deny women their own voice. Attending to modes of being and believing in works by Augusta Jane Evans, Harriet Jacobs, Catharine Maria Sedgwick, Elizabeth Oakes Smith, Elizabeth Stoddard, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Susan Warner, Reed illuminates how these writers infused the secular space of fiction with religious ideas and debates, imagining new possibilities for women's individual agency and collective action. Thanks to generous funding from Virginia Tech and its participation in TOME (Toward an Open Monograph Ecosystem), the ebook editions of this book ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 265 Pages (3,078 KB)
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Added: Oct 9th, 2022

Framed: The New Woman Criminal in British Culture at the Fin de Siecle by Elizabeth Carolyn Miller (U OF M DIGT CULT BOOKS) 4.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 11 hours ago

Framed uses fin de siècle British crime narrative to pose a highly interesting question: why do female criminal characters tend to be alluring and appealing while fictional male criminals of the era are unsympathetic or even grotesque? In this elegantly argued study, Elizabeth Carolyn Miller addresses this question, examining popular literary and cinematic culture from roughly 1880 to 1914 to shed light on an otherwise overlooked social and cultural type: the conspicuously glamorous New Woman criminal. In so doing, she breaks with the many Foucauldian studies of crime to emphasize the genuinely subversive aspects of these popular female figures. Drawing on a rich body of archival material, Miller argues that the New Woman Criminal exploited iconic elements of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century commodity culture, including cosmetics and clothing, to fashion an illicit identity that enabled her to subvert legal authority in both the public and the private spheres. "This is ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 298 Pages (4,077 KB)
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Added: Sep 24th, 2022

Fragments of Ancient Poetry by James MacPherson 3.8 Stars (29 Reviews)    Price verified 10 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 50 Pages (132 KB)
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Added: Sep 22nd, 2022

Chinese Sympathies: Media, Missionaries, and World Literature from Marco Polo to Goethe (Signale: Modern German Letters, Cultures, and Thought) by Daniel Leonhard Purdy (Cornell University Press and Cornell University Library) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 5 hours ago

Chinese Sympathies examines how Europeans -- German-speaking writers and thinkers in particular -- identified with Chinese intellectual and literary traditions following the circulation of Marco Polo's Travels. This sense of affinity expanded and deepened, Daniel Leonhard Purdy shows, as generations of Jesuit missionaries, baroque encyclopedists, Enlightenment moralists, and translators established intellectual regimes that framed China as being fundamentally similar to Europe. Analyzing key German literary texts -- theological treatises, imperial histories, tragic dramas, moral philosophies, literary translations, and poetic cycles -- Chinese Sympathies traces the paths from baroque-era missionary reports that accommodated Christianity with Confucianism to Goethe's concept of world literature, bridged by Enlightenment debates over cosmopolitanism and sympathy, culminating in a secular principle that allowed readers to identify meaningful similarities across culturally diverse ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 413 Pages (5,765 KB)
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Added: Sep 8th, 2022

Keeping up Her Geography: Women's Writing and Geocultural Space in Early Twentieth-Century U.S. Literature and Culture (Literary Criticism and ... by Tanya Ann Kennedy (Routledge) 5.0 Stars (2 Reviews)    Price verified 2 hours ago

Recently, literary critics and some historians have argued that to use the language of separate spheres is to "mistake fiction for reality." However, the tendency in this criticism is to ignore the work of feminist political theorists who argue that a range of ideologies of the public and private consistently work to mask gender inequalities. In Keeping Up Her Geography, Tanya Ann Kenedy argues that these inequalities are shaped by multiple, but interconnected, spatial constructions of the public and private in US culture. Moreover, the early twentieth century when key spatial concepts - the nation, the urban, the regional, and the domestic - were being redefined is a pivotal era for understanding how the public-private binary remains tenaciously central to the defining of gender. Keeping Up Her Geography shows that this is the case in a range of literary and cultural contexts: in feminist speeches at the World's Columbian Exposition, in middle-class women's urban reform texts, in ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 188 Pages (1,621 KB)
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Added: Aug 31st, 2022

The Supplement of Reading: Figures of Understanding in Romantic Theory and Practice by Tilottama Rajan (Cornell University Press) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 3 hours ago

Tilottama Rajan illuminates a crisis of representation within romanticism, evident in the proliferation of stylistically and structurally unsettled literary texts that resist interpretation in terms of a unified meaning. The Supplement of Reading investigates the role of the reader both in romantic literary texts and in the hermeneutic theory that has responded to and generated such texts. Rajan considers how selected works by Coleridge, Wordsworth, Blake, Shelley, Godwin, and Wollstonecraft explore the problem of understanding in relation to interpretive difference, including the differences produced by gender, class, and history.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 483 Pages (16 KB)
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Added: Aug 9th, 2022

Authorship and Text-making in Early China (Library of Sinology [LOS] Book 2) by Hanmo Zhang (De Gruyter Mouton) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 25 minutes ago

This book is a timely response to a rather urgent call to seek an updated methodology in rereading and reappraising early Chinese texts in light of newly discovered early writings. For a long time, the concept of authorship in the formation and transmission of early Chinese texts has been misunderstood. The nominal author who should mainly function as a guide to text formation and interpretation is considered retrospectively as the originator and writer of the text. This book illustrates that although some notions about the text as the author's property began to appear in some Eastern Han texts, a strict correlation between the author and the text results from later conceptions of literary history. Before the modern era, there existed a conceptual gap between an author and a writer. A pre-modern Chinese text could have had both an author and a writer, or even multiple authors and multiple writers. This work is the first study addressing these issues by more systematically emphasizing ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 573 Pages (5,670 KB)
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Added: Aug 4th, 2022

Contemporary Nordic Literature and Spatiality (Geocriticism and Spatial Literary Studies) by Kristina Malmio (Palgrave Macmillan) 5.0 Stars (3 Reviews)    Price verified 25 minutes ago

This open access collection offers a detailed mapping of recent Nordic literature and its different genres (fiction, poetry, and children's literature) through the perspective of spatiality. Concentrating on contemporary Nordic literature, the book presents a distinctive view on the spatial turn and widens the understanding of Nordic literature outside of canonized authors. Examining literatures by Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, and Finnish authors, the chapters investigate a recurrent theme of social criticism and analyze this criticism against the welfare state and power hierarchies in spatial terms. The chapters explore various narrative worlds and spaces -- from the urban to parks and forests, from textual spaces to spatial thematics, studying these spatial features in relation to the problems of late modernity.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 438 Pages (61 KB)
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Added: Aug 2nd, 2022

Race Characters: Ethnic Literature and the Figure of the American Dream by Swati Rana (The University of North Carolina Press) 4.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified one hour ago

A vexed figure inhabits U.S. literature and culture: the visibly racialized immigrant who disavows minority identity and embraces the American dream. Such figures are potent and controversial, for they promise to expiate racial violence and perpetuate an exceptionalist ideal of America. Swati Rana grapples with these figures, building on studies of literary character and racial form. Rana offers a new way to view characterization through racialization that creates a fuller social reading of race. Situated in a nascent period of ethnic identification from 1900 to 1960, this book focuses on immigrant writers who do not fit neatly into a resistance-based model of ethnic literature. Writings by Paule Marshall, Ameen Rihani, Dalip Singh Saund, Jose Garcia Villa, and Jose Antonio Villarreal symbolize different aspects of the American dream, from individualism to imperialism, assimilation to upward mobility. The dynamics of characterization are also those of contestation, Rana argues. ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 272 Pages (7,076 KB)
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Added: Jul 15th, 2022

Narrating Nonhuman Spaces: Form, Story, and Experience Beyond Anthropocentrism (Routledge Studies in World Literatures and the Environment) by Marco Caracciolo (Routledge) 4.5 Stars (2 Reviews)    Price verified 5 hours ago

Recent debates about the Anthropocene have prompted a re-negotiation of the relationship between human subjectivity and nonhuman matter within a wide range of disciplines. This collection builds on the assumption that our understanding of the nonhuman world is bound up with the experience of space: thinking about and with nonhuman spaces destabilizes human-scale assumptions. Literary form affords this kind of nonanthropocentric experience; one role of the critic in the Anthropocene is to foreground the function of space and description in challenging the conventional link between narrative and human (inter)subjectivity. Bringing together New Formalism, ecocriticism, and narrative theory, the included essays demonstrate that literature can transgress the strong and long-established boundary of the human frame that literary and narrative scholarship clings to. The focus is firmly on the contemporary but with strategic samplings in earlier cultural texts (the American transcendentalists, ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 240 Pages (7,537 KB)
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Added: Jun 23rd, 2022

No and Yes by Mary Baker Eddy 4.5 Stars (12 Reviews)    Price verified 8 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 43 Pages (114 KB)
Lending: Enabled
Added: Jun 5th, 2022

Christian's Mistake by Dinah Maria Mulock Craik 3.6 Stars (21 Reviews)    Price verified 10 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 173 Pages (484 KB)
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Added: May 10th, 2022

A Noble Life by Dinah Maria Mulock Craik 4.5 Stars (27 Reviews)    Price verified 2 hours ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 143 Pages (486 KB)
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Added: May 10th, 2022

Santo Domingo A Country with a Future by Otto Schoenrich 3.9 Stars (5 Reviews)    Price verified one hour ago

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 345 Pages (789 KB)
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Added: Apr 28th, 2022

Symptoms of an Unruly Age: Li Zhi and Cultures of Early Modernity by Rivi Handler-Spitz (University of Washington Press) 5.0 Stars (2 Reviews)    Price verified 55 minutes ago

Symptoms of an Unruly Age compares the writings of Li Zhi (1527-1602) and his late-Ming compatriots to texts composed by their European contemporaries, including Montaigne, Shakespeare, and Cervantes. Emphasizing aesthetic patterns that transcend national boundaries, Rivi Handler-Spitz explores these works as culturally distinct responses to similar social and economic tensions affecting early modern cultures on both ends of Eurasia. The paradoxes, ironies, and self-contradictions that pervade these works are symptomatic of the hypocrisy, social posturing, and counterfeiting that afflicted both Chinese and European societies at the turn of the seventeenth century. Symptoms of an Unruly Age shows us that these texts, produced thousands of miles away from one another, each constitute cultural manifestations of early modernity.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 338 Pages (9,014 KB)
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Added: Apr 23rd, 2022

Heralds of Empire Being the Story of One Ramsay Stanhope, Lieutenant to Pierre Radisson in the Northern Fur Trade by Agnes C. (Agnes Christina) Laut 4.4 Stars (4 Reviews)    Price verified 30 minutes ago

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Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 252 Pages (324 KB)
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Added: Apr 13th, 2022

Strange Science: Investigating the Limits of Knowledge in the Victorian Age by Lara Pauline Karpenko (University of Michigan Press) 3.8 Stars (9 Reviews)    Price verified 3 hours ago

The essays in Strange Science examine marginal, fringe, and unconventional forms of scientific inquiry, as well as their cultural representations, in the Victorian period. Although now relegated to the category of the pseudoscientific, fields like mesmerism and psychical research captured the imagination of the Victorian public. Conversely, many branches of science now viewed as uncontroversial, such as physics and botany, were often associated with unorthodox methods of inquiry. Whether ultimately incorporated into mainstream scientific thought or categorized by 21st century historians as pseudo- or even anti-scientific, these sciences generated conversation, enthusiasm, and controversy within Victorian society. To date, scholarship addressing Victorian pseudoscience tends to focus either on a particular popular science within its social context or on how mainstream scientific practice distinguished itself from more contested forms. Strange Science takes a different approach by ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 306 Pages (2,090 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Mar 26th, 2022

The Nivison Annals: Selected Works of David S. Nivison on Early Chinese Chronology, Astronomy, and Historiography (Library of Sinology [LOS] Book 1) by David S. Nivison (De Gruyter Mouton) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified 55 minutes ago

In his last essay just weeks before his death at the age of 91, David S. Nivison says, "Breaking into a formal system - such as a chronology - must be like breaking into a code. If you are successful, success will show right off." Since the late 1970's Nivison has focused his scholarship on breaking the code of Three Dynasties (Xia, Shang, Zhou) chronology by establishing an innovative methodology based on mourning periods, astronomical phenomenon, and numerical manipulations derived from them. Nivison is most readily known in the field for revising (and then revising again) the date of the Zhou conquest of Shang, and for his theory that Western Zhou kings employed two calendars (His so-called "Two yuan" theory), the second being set in effect upon the death of the new king's predecessor and counted from the completion of post-mourning rites for him (i.e., a "second 'first' year"). Nivison's enabling discovery that the Bamboo Annals (BA) had a historical basis was initially ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 473 Pages (18,221 KB)
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Added: Mar 2nd, 2022

Keys to The Gift: A Guide to Vladimir Nabokov's Novel (Studies in Russian and Slavic Literatures, Cultures, and History) by Yuri Leving (Academic Studies Press) 5.0 Stars (6 Reviews)    Price verified 55 minutes ago

Yuri Leving's Keys to "The Gift": A Guide to Vladimir Nabokov's Novel is a new systematization of the main available data on Nabokov's most complex Russian novel, The Gift (1934-1939). From notes in Nabokov's private correspondence to scholarly articles accumulated during the seventy years since the novel's first appearance in print, the work draws from a broad spectrum of existing material in a succinct and coherent way, as well as providing innovative analyses. The first part of the monograph, "The Novel," outlines the basic properties of The Gift ( plot, characters, style, and motifs) and reconstructs its internal chronology. The second part, "The Text," describes the creation of the novel and the history of its publication, public and critical reaction, challenges of the English translation, and post-Soviet reception. Along with annotations to all five chapters of The Gift, the commentary provides insight into problems of paleography, featuring unique textological analysis of the ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 742 Pages (22,061 KB)
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Added: Feb 9th, 2022

Confucius and Cicero: Old Ideas for a New World, New Ideas for an Old World (Roma Sinica Book 1) by Andrea Balbo 3.8 Stars (4 Reviews)    Price verified 3 hours ago

This book explores the relationships between ancient Roman and Confucian thought, paying particular attention to their relevance for the contemporary world. More than 10 scholars from all around the world offer thereby a reference work for the comparative research between Roman (and early Greek) and Eastern thought, setting new trends in the panorama of Classical and Comparative Studies.

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 362 Pages (30 KB)
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Added: Jan 12th, 2022

The Life of Breath in Literature, Culture and Medicine: Classical to Contemporary (Palgrave Studies in Literature, Science and Medicine) by David Fuller (Palgrave Macmillan) 4.6 Stars (3 Reviews)    Price verified 2 hours ago

This open access book studies breath and breathing in literature and culture and provides crucial insights into the history of medicine, health and the emotions, the foundations of beliefs concerning body, spirit and world, the connections between breath and creativity and the phenomenology of breath and breathlessness. Contributions span the classical, medieval, early modern, Romantic, Victorian, modern and contemporary periods, drawing on medical writings, philosophy, theology and the visual arts as well as on literary, historical and cultural studies. The collection illustrates the complex significance and symbolic power of breath and breathlessness across time: breath is written deeply into ideas of nature, spirituality, emotion, creativity and being, and is inextricable from notions of consciousness, spirit, inspiration, voice, feeling, freedom and movement. The volume also demonstrates the long-standing connections between breath and place, politics and aesthetics, illuminating ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 781 Pages (112 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Dec 10th, 2021

Irregular Unions: Clandestine Marriage in Early Modern English Literature by Katharine Cleland (Cornell University Press) 3.7 Stars (5 Reviews)    Price verified 3 hours ago

Katharine Cleland's Irregular Unionsprovides the first sustained literary history of clandestine marriage in early modern England and reveals its controversial nature in the wake of the Elizabethan Religious Settlement, which standardized the marriage ritual for the first time. Cleland examines many examples of clandestine marriage across genres. Discussing such classic works as The Faerie Queene, Othello, and The Merchant of Venice, she argues that early modern authors used clandestine marriage to explore the intersection between the self and the marriage ritual in post-Reformation England. The ways in which authors grappled with the political and social complexities of clandestine marriage, Cleland finds, suggest that these narratives were far more than interesting plot devices or scandalous stories ripped from the headlines. Instead, after the Reformation, fictions of clandestine marriage allowed early modern authors to explore topics of identity formation in new and different ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 199 Pages (2,395 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Oct 4th, 2021

The Black Arts Enterprise and the Production of African American Poetry by Howard Rambsy (University of Michigan Press) 4.8 Stars (9 Reviews)    Price verified 4 hours ago

The Black Arts Enterprise and the Production of African American Poetry offers a close examination of the literary culture in which the Black Arts Movement's poets (including Amiri Baraka, Nikki Giovanni, Sonia Sanchez, Larry Neal, Haki Madhubuti, Carolyn Rodgers, and others) operated and of the small presses and literary anthologies that first published the movement's authors. The book also describes the role of the Black Arts Movement in reintroducing readers to poets such as Langston Hughes, Robert Hayden, Margaret Walker, and Phillis Wheatley. Focusing on the material production of Black Arts poetry, the book combines genetic criticism with cultural history to shed new light on the period, its publishing culture, and the writing and editing practices of its participants. Howard Rambsy II demonstrates how significant circulation and format of black poetic texts -- not simply their content -- were to the formation of an artistic movement. The book goes on to examine other ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 196 Pages (1,062 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Sep 2nd, 2021

Publishing Blackness: Textual Constructions of Race Since 1850 (Editorial Theory And Literary Criticism) by George Hutchinson (University of Michigan Press) 5.0 Stars (1 Review)    Price verified one hour ago

From the white editorial authentication of slave narratives, to the cultural hybridity of the Harlem Renaissance, to the overtly independent publications of the Black Arts Movement, to the commercial power of Oprah's Book Club, African American textuality has been uniquely shaped by the contests for cultural power inherent in literary production and distribution. Always haunted by the commodification of blackness, African American literary production interfaces with the processes of publication and distribution in particularly charged ways. An energetic exploration of the struggles and complexities of African American print culture, this collection ranges across the history of African American literature, and the authors have much to contribute on such issues as editorial and archival preservation, canonization, and the "packaging" and repackaging of black-authored texts. Publishing Blackness aims to project African Americanist scholarship into the discourse of textual scholarship, ...

Genre: Literary Criticism [x]
Length: 244 Pages (623 KB)
Lending: Not Enabled
Added: Jul 26th, 2021