Tall Grows the Grass (Book 3 - 'Africa and Beyond')

Tall Grows the Grass (Book 3 - 'Africa and Beyond')

Author: James F Frayne

Publisher: Lulu.com

Published: 2016-05-19

Total Pages: 178

ISBN-13: 1326606751

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Johnny had been drawn into what turned out to be a wide-spread conspiracy. For him, he was forced to return to England and the lacklustre life from which he had earlier escaped. The Third book follows Johnny to Switzerland and then back to Africa, firstly to South West Africa (now Namibia), and then to South Africa and then the USA before he finally returns to the United Kingdom to hang up his roving shoes. It was not long after Johnny had returned to the United Kingdom than he was transferred to Switzerland with the company he had joined. While there, he made an interesting discovery from somebody who was connected to the CIA, and married a French girl before he took a job with another bank, this time in South West Africa (now Namibia). It was there that he was met with enmity from his manager before he was transferred to Cape Town. In Cape Town he happened to meet up again with his old colleague from Zambia under curious circumstances. But that was not the end!


The Poetics of Poesis

The Poetics of Poesis

Author: Felicia Bonaparte

Publisher: University of Virginia Press

Published: 2016-01-11

Total Pages: 430

ISBN-13: 0813937337

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Examining novels written in nineteenth-century England and throughout most of the West, as well as philosophical essays on the conception of fictional form, Felicia Bonaparte sees the novel in this period not as the continuation of eighteenth-century "realism," as has commonly been assumed, but as a genre unto itself. Determined to address the crises in religion and philosophy that had shattered the foundations by which the past had been sustained, novelists of the nineteenth century felt they had no real alternative but to make the world anew. Finding in the new ideas of the early German Romantics a theory precisely designed for the remaking of the world, these novelists accepted Friedrich Schlegel’s challenge to create a form that would render such a remaking possible. They spoke of their theory as poesis, etymologically "a making," to distinguish it from the mimesis associated with "realism." Its purpose, however, was not only to embody, as George Eliot put it in Middlemarch, "the idealistic in the real," giving as faithful an account of the real as observation can yield, but also to embody in that conception of the real a discussion of ideas that are its "symbolic signification," as Edward Bulwer-Lytton described it in one of his essays. It was to carry this double meaning that the nineteenth-century novelist created, Bonaparte concludes, the language of mythical symbolism that came to be the norm for this form, and she argues that it is in this doubled language that nineteenth-century fiction must be read.