Aspects and Impressions
Author: Edmund Gosse
Publisher:
Published: 1922
Total Pages: 314
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRead and Download eBook Full
Author: Edmund Gosse
Publisher:
Published: 1922
Total Pages: 314
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Edmund Gosse
Publisher: DigiCat
Published: 2022-07-31
Total Pages: 175
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKDigiCat Publishing presents to you this special edition of "Aspects and Impressions" by Edmund Gosse. DigiCat Publishing considers every written word to be a legacy of humankind. Every DigiCat book has been carefully reproduced for republishing in a new modern format. The books are available in print, as well as ebooks. DigiCat hopes you will treat this work with the acknowledgment and passion it deserves as a classic of world literature.
Author: Ralph Pite
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Published: 2024-05-31
Total Pages: 517
ISBN-13: 1040129099
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn their own time, Lewis Carroll, Robert Louis Stevenson and Algernon Charles Swinburne were highly successful writers. Part of the "Lives of Victorian Literary Figures" series, this three-volume facsimile edition draws together a range of biographical sources relating to these three celebrated Victorian authors.
Author: Ralph Pite
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Published: 2024-05-17
Total Pages: 242
ISBN-13: 104012951X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKPart of the "Lives of Victorian Literary Figures" series, this set collects contemporary memoirs, biographies and ephemera relating to Oscar Wilde, Henry James and Edith Wharton. Editorial apparatus includes a general introduction, headnotes, endnotes and a general index.
Author: English Association
Publisher:
Published: 1922
Total Pages: 208
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Alex Zwerdling
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 2017
Total Pages: 251
ISBN-13: 0198755783
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Rise of the Memoir traces the growth and extraordinarily wide appeal of the memoir. Its territory is private rather than public life, shame, guilt, and embarrassment, not the achievements celebrated in the public record. What accounts for the sharp need writers like Rousseau, Woolf, Orwell, Nabokov, Primo Levi, and Maxine Hong Kingston felt to write (and to publish) such works, when they might more easily have chosen to remain silent? Alex Zwerdling explores why each of these writers felt compelled to write them as that story can be reconstructed from personal materials available in archival collections; what internal conflicts they encountered while trying; and how each of them resisted the private and public pressures to stop themselves rather than pursuing this confessional route, against their own doubts, without a reasonable expectation that such works would be welcome in print, and eventually find an empathetic audience. Reconstructing this process in which a dubious project eventually becomes a compelling product-a "memoir" that will last-illuminates both what was at stake, and why this serially invented open form has reshaped the expectations of readers who welcomed a vital alternative to "the official story."
Author: Herbert David Croly
Publisher:
Published: 1922
Total Pages: 388
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Jonathan Taylor
Publisher: Springer
Published: 2019-02-04
Total Pages: 264
ISBN-13: 3030114139
DOWNLOAD EBOOKLaughter, Literature, Violence, 1840-1930 investigates the strange, complex, even paradoxical relationship between laughter, on the one hand, and violence, war, horror, death, on the other. It does so in relation to philosophy, politics, and key nineteenth- and twentieth-century literary texts, by Edgar Allan Poe, Edmund Gosse, Wyndham Lewis and Katherine Mansfield – texts which explore the far reaches of Schadenfreude, and so-called ‘superiority theories’ of laughter, pushing these theories to breaking point. In these literary texts, the violent superiority often ascribed to laughter is seen as radically unstable, co-existing with its opposite: an anarchic sense of equality. Laughter, humour and comedy are slippery, duplicitous, ambivalent, self-contradictory hybrids, fusing apparently discordant elements. Now and then, though, literary and philosophical texts also dream of a different kind of laughter, one which reaches beyond its alloys – a transcendent, ‘perfect’ laughter which exists only in and for itself.