Cervantes's Eight Interludes

Cervantes's Eight Interludes

Author: Miguel Cervantes

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Published: 2000-01-01

Total Pages: 117

ISBN-13: 1495049698

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Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616) is Spain's most famous author, primarily because of his celebrated novel Don Quixote. His first love, however, was the theater, for which he wrote extensively. His Interludes, published 400 years ago in 1615, are short, comic plays that explore the underbelly of Renaissance Spanish society. Their characters include hillbillies and con artists, pimps and prostitutes, adulterous wives and jealous husbands, and an array of other comical figures. Cervantes's treatment of them is simultaneously critical and sympathetic. Although interludes tend to be works of light comedy, Cervantes often imbues his with deeper themes. Charles Patterson, a scholar of Hispanic theater, has created translations of the Interludes that are true to the earthiness of the originals but designed to be readily playable for today's actors and accessible to modern audiences. This book includes an introduction that places the plays in context, briefly describing the life of Cervantes, theater in early modern Spain, Cervantes's interludes, and Patterson's approach to translating them. Casual readers, theater and literature students, and professional actors alike will delight in these comedic gems that reveal a less familiar side of one of history's greatest writers.


Interludes and Irony in the Ancestral Narrative

Interludes and Irony in the Ancestral Narrative

Author: Jonathan A. Kruschwitz

Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers

Published: 2020-12-18

Total Pages: 247

ISBN-13: 1725260794

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The stories of Hagar, Dinah, and Tamar stand out as strangers in the ancestral narrative. They deviate from the main plot and draw attention to the interests and fates of characters who are not a part of the ancestral family. Readers have traditionally domesticated these strange stories. They have made them "familiar"--all about the ancestral family. Thus Hagar's story becomes a drama of deselection, Shechem and the Hivites become emblematic for ancestral conflict with the people of the land, and Tamar becomes a lens by which to read providence in the story of Joseph. This study resurrects the question of these stories' strangeness. Rather than allow the ancestral narrative to determine their significance, it attends to each interlude's particularity and detects ironic gestures made toward the ancestral narrative. These stories contain within them the potential to defamiliarize key themes of ancestral identity: the ancestral-divine relationship, ancestral relations to the land and its inhabitants, and ancestral self-identity. Perhaps the ancestral family are not the only privileged partners of God, the only heirs to the land, or the only bloodline fit to bear the next generation.


Interludes

Interludes

Author: Michael J. Easley

Publisher: Moody Publishers

Published: 2006-01-01

Total Pages: 126

ISBN-13: 1575674637

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Interludes is an honest, reflective look at one man's journey toward a strong and deep prayer relationship with God. Dr. Michael J. Easley, the former president of Moody Bible Institute, shares fresh insights on prayer, helpful ideas to strengthen one's prayer life, and, most important, a variety of heartfelt appeals to his Lord. This first book by an exciting new voice in Christian publishing has the candor and immediacy of a personal spiritual journal as well as the warm heart of a pastor. Interludes, in Dr. Easley's words, invites us to a lifelong connection with prayer. Ideal both for devotional times and brief "interludes" of refreshment.


Shifting Interludes: Selected Essays

Shifting Interludes: Selected Essays

Author:

Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi

Published:

Total Pages: 230

ISBN-13: 9781604736687

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A collection of eloquent, sometimes hard-hitting essays by one of the South's most beloved writers covers forty years in Morris's career as a journalist and columnist. (Literature)


Slayful Stories

Slayful Stories

Author: Melanie Mccurdie

Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform

Published: 2016-04-08

Total Pages: 154

ISBN-13: 9781530144990

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Welcome to Interludes, a collection of short stories by Canadian author Melanie McCurdie. These separate journeys take place in ordinary towns, in the midst of ordinary life. The stories in this collection peel back the facade of normal, revealing the horrors that await, and in every one, something lurks... All the players in these nasty and wicked little tales soon reveal their true, appalling faces that skulk beneath the masks they wear. Interludes contains several new tales including: Thicker Than Water, Frozen, Follow The Dog and a sneak peek into the upcoming novel Autopsia featuring the excerpt Snapshot.


Erotic Interludes

Erotic Interludes

Author: Lonnie Barbach

Publisher: National Geographic Books

Published: 1995-06-01

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 0452273986

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With her groundbreaking works of erotica, Lonnie Barbach has given women a forum to express their most passionate and imaginative fantasies about sex and sexual encounters. These graphic stories, filled with the unexpected and the forbidden, brilliantly capture the myriad layers, colors, and visions of every woman's sexuality. A book that can be read as a starting point for shared intimacies or as a pleasure experienced in solitude, EROTIC INTERLUDES stimulates the mind as well as the body. These twenty-one stories by and about women--yound and old, married and single, heterosexual and lesbian--bring a feminine point of view to such subjects as mysterious partners, racy games, and risque encounters. But most important, EROTIC INTERLUDES is fun, celebrating a woman's sensualtiy and reaffirming her right to the positive pleasures and adventure of sex. The result is a classic work of explicit passion, ready to be thoroughly enjoyed.


African Rhythm

African Rhythm

Author: Victor Kofi Agawu

Publisher: CUP Archive

Published: 1995

Total Pages: 266

ISBN-13: 9780521480840

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. An accompanying compact disk enables the reader to work closely with the sound of African speech and song discussed in the book.


Pacific Interlude

Pacific Interlude

Author: Sloan Wilson

Publisher: Open Road Media

Published: 2014-12-23

Total Pages: 308

ISBN-13: 149768966X

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During the last days of World War II, a young officer braves enemy fire and a maverick crew on the open waters and in the steamy ports of the South Pacific Twenty-five-year-old Coast Guard lieutenant Sylvester Grant, a veteran of the Greenland Patrol, has just been given command of a small gas tanker, running shuttle and convoy duties for the US Army. Sally, his wife of three years, is eager for him to get back to Massachusetts and live a conventional suburban life selling insurance—but Syl longs for adventure and is bound to find it as the captain of a beat-up, unseaworthy vessel carrying extremely flammable cargo across dangerous stretches of the Pacific Ocean. As the Allies prepare to retake the Philippines, the only thing the sailors aboard the Y-18 want is for the war to be over. First, however, they must survive their mission to bring two hundred thousand gallons of high-octane aviation fuel to shore. From below-deck personality clashes to the terrifying possibility of an enemy attack, from combating illness and boredom to the constant stress of preventing an explosion that could blow their ship sky high, the crew of the Y-18 must learn to work together and trust their captain—otherwise, they might never make it home. Based on Sloan Wilson’s own experiences, Pacific Interlude is a thrilling and realistic story of World War II and a moving portrait of a man looking toward the future while trying to survive a precarious present.


The Late Medieval Interlude

The Late Medieval Interlude

Author: Fiona S. Dunlop

Publisher: Boydell & Brewer

Published: 2007

Total Pages: 154

ISBN-13: 1903153212

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Sensitive study of the 15/16 century interlude, focussing on one of its major concerns, the depiction of male aristocracy and the development to maturity. The commercial theatre of the late sixteenth century is often credited with introducing its audiences to new modes of thought about the self, society and the nation, making them conscious that the self is performed, as an actor performs a role. Yet the earlier interlude drama, originally performed in households and other institutions of the late fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, indicates that the late medieval period was fully aware of the theatricalityof identity. This book argues that ideas of performance inform the concepts of aristocratic masculinity developed in the plays Nature, Fulgens and Lucres, The Worlde and the Chylde, The Interlude of Youth and Calisto and Melebea. It examines how the depiction of young male aristocrats in these texts is shaped by ideas of male youth constituted in the middle ages, and shows them as failing or succeeding to perform anadult noble masculinity in the aristocratic body and in aristocratic household. The book also suggests ways in which the plays offer discreet praise and censure of the manner in which their noble patrons performed as aristocrats.Throughout, it brings out the subtle qualities of the interludes, which, the author shows, have been unjustly neglected. Dr FIONA S. DUNLOP is Research Associate of the Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York