Late-Victorian and Edwardian British Novelists

Late-Victorian and Edwardian British Novelists

Author: George Malcolm Johnson

Publisher: Dictionary of Literary Biograp

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 440

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This award-winning multi-volume series is dedicated to making literature and its creators better understood and more accessible to students and interested readers, while satisfying the standards of librarians, teachers and scholars. Dictionary of Literary Biography provides reliable information in an easily comprehensible format, while placing writers in the larger perspective of literary history. Dictionary of Literary Biography systematically presents career biographies and criticism of writers from all eras and all genres through volumes dedicated to specific types of literature and time periods. For a listing of Dictionary of Literary Biography volumes sorted by genre click here. 01


Life in the Writings of Storm Jameson

Life in the Writings of Storm Jameson

Author: Elizabeth Maslen

Publisher: Northwestern University Press

Published: 2014-09-05

Total Pages: 578

ISBN-13: 0810129795

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Elizabeth Maslen's excellent biography offers a fresh look at the intersection of Jameson's life and work and the way these intersected with figures from Rebecca West to Arthur Koeslter to Czeslaw Milosz.


Between the Pigeonholes

Between the Pigeonholes

Author: Alison Falby

Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Published: 2020-12-15

Total Pages: 220

ISBN-13: 1527563774

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Aldous Huxley described Gerald Heard as “that rare being—a learned man who [made] his mental home on the vacant spaces between the pigeonholes.” Heard’s off-beat interests made him a cultural and intellectual pioneer on both sides of the Atlantic in the middle decades of the twentieth century. Despite accolades from such figures as E.M. Forster, who characterized him as “one of the most penetrating minds in England,” and Christopher Isherwood, who described him upon his death as one of the “few great magic mythmakers and revealers of life’s wonder,” Heard is largely unknown today. Between the Pigeonholes is the first published full-length study of Gerald Heard. Alison Falby examines Heard’s ideas and contexts in interwar Britain and postwar America, demonstrating his significance in several important twentieth-century movements. These movements include popular science and psychology, psychical research, Eastern spirituality, pacifism, cooperativism, and Californian counter-culture. All of Heard’s involvements expressed his desire to convey religious ideas in the modern languages of biological, social, and physical science. Falby also traces Heard’s shifting political leanings from left-liberal in the early-1930s to libertarian in the early-1960s. She finds that his modernist theological approach, conventionally associated with liberal religion and politics, provided spiritual fodder for those on both the Left and the Right: Isherwood and W.H. Auden on the one hand, and Clare Boothe Luce and Spiritual Mobilization on the other. Using Heard as a prism through which to examine popular ideas, Falby shows that the twentieth century contained much political and religious heterogeneity. This heterogeneity illustrates the diverse and overlapping roots of both liberal religion and conservative politics in the twenty-first century.


British Short-fiction Writers, 1915-1945

British Short-fiction Writers, 1915-1945

Author: John Headley Rogers

Publisher: Dictionary of Literary Biograp

Published: 1996

Total Pages: 472

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Essays on authors of the short story that had its origins in the mid-nineteenth century and reached its maturity in England in the twentieth century. The modern British short story grew slowly following by nearly fifty years the origins of this form in the United States, France and Russia. Discusses why several features of nineteenth-century English life may have delayed the development of this literary form.


Revival: Thought and Reality - Hegelianism and Advaita (1937)

Revival: Thought and Reality - Hegelianism and Advaita (1937)

Author: Poolla Tirupati Raju

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2018-07-27

Total Pages: 309

ISBN-13: 1351242830

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This work is a contribution to certain aspects of idealistic philosophy. It is a comparative study, yet it is not a comparison for the sake of comparison. This book examines the supra-rational Absolutism of the West developed under the Hegelian influence, and in the light of the criticisms shows the peculiar character of the Advaita Vedanta of Sankara. It is therefore not a mere exposition, but a criticism and construction. The discussions are not cosmological, but epistemological and metaphysical, approached from the side of logic. The work may also be viewed as a reorientation of Sankara's system. It places Sankara’s philosophy in line with the idealistic philosophies of the West, so that we can understand the peculiarities of the former in terms of the latter. It thus discovers or brings into clearer light the guiding principle of Sankara’s thought. It brings out the full significance of the principles of non-contradiction applied by Sankara as a test of truth and reality, and shows its difference from the same principle as understood by Hegel and the Hegelians. The aim of this work is to attempt at laying the metaphysical foundation of the logic of supra-rational Absolutism, the interpretation of Advaita is based mostly on polemical works.


J. D. Beresford

J. D. Beresford

Author: George Malcolm Johnson

Publisher: Macmillan Reference USA

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 216

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book presents information on J. D. Beresford's life and critical interpretation and discussion of his writings.


Ezra Pound: Poet

Ezra Pound: Poet

Author: A. David Moody

Publisher: OUP Oxford

Published: 2014-09-25

Total Pages: 456

ISBN-13: 0191056502

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The long-awaited second volume of A. David Moody's critically acclaimed three-part biography of Ezra Pound weaves together the illuminating story of his life, his achievements as a poet and a composer, and his one-man crusade for economic justice. The years 1921-1939 were the most productive of Pound's career. In 1920s Paris, he was among the leading figures of the avant-garde and, in that ambience, he composed an opera, made original contributions to the theory of harmony, and wrote the first thirty cantos of his great epic. Moody explores this creativity in fascinating detail, examining the environment that allowed for some of Pound's greatest work. This period also brought Pound's politics firmly into view and Moody is able to shed new light on his sympathy for Mussolini's Fascism, his invoking Confucian China as a model of responsible government, and his abiding commitment to the democratic values of the American Constitution. Pound is revealed as a great poet and a flawed idealist caught up in the turmoil of his darkening time and struggling, sometimes blindly and in error and self-contradiction, to be a force for enlightenment.