Manufacturing Middle Ages

Manufacturing Middle Ages

Author:

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2013-08-22

Total Pages: 450

ISBN-13: 9004244875

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Across the nineteenth century European history, philology, archaeology, art, and architecture turned from a common classical vocabulary and ideology to images of pasts and origins drawn primarily from the Middle Ages. The result was a paradox, as scholars and artists, schooled in the same pan-European vocabularies and methodologies nevertheless sought to discover through them unique and, frequently, oppositional national identities. These essays, edited by Patrick J. Geary and Gábor Klaniczay, focus on this all-European phenomenon with a special focus on Scandinavia and East-Central Europe, bearing witness to the inextricable links between cultural and scientific engagement, the search for national identity, and political agendas in the long nineteenth century that made the search for archaic origins an entangled history. Contributors include: Walter Pohl, Ian Wood, Sverre Bagge, Maciej Janowski, Sir David Wilson, Anders Andrén, Ernő Marosi, Carmen Popescu, Ahmet Ersoy, Michael Werner, Joep Leerssen, R. Howard Bloch, Pavlína Rychterová, Tommaso di Carpegna Falconieri, Stefan Detchev, Florin Curta, and Péter Langó.


His Butler's Story

His Butler's Story

Author: Эдуард Лимонов

Publisher: Grove/Atlantic

Published: 1987

Total Pages: 360

ISBN-13:

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"A Russian emigre who is a sexual adventurer, as well as a former criminal and drug addict, obtains a job as a butler and shares his harsh observations on wealthy New Yorkers" --


Slavic Review

Slavic Review

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 556

ISBN-13:

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"American quarterly of Soviet and East European studies" (varies).


Russia and the Russians

Russia and the Russians

Author: Edmund Noble

Publisher:

Published: 1900

Total Pages: 306

ISBN-13:

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Russia, in the popular yiew of it, is regarded as a far-away country of but remote interest for all save a few of the western nations with whom it maintains more or less close political relations. We ourselves are apt to think of it, when we give it a thought, in terms of one or other of those conventional judgments which the world at large passes upon communities that from time to time compel its attention, but which it never thoroughly understands. Nor does travel always enlighten us as to the value for our culture processes of a knowledge of this long isolated empire in the European northeast. Extend our journey through Russia as we will, we seem ever to find ourselves in few and poorly developed urban communities, with their increasing proletariat, where poverty, intemperance, and sanitary neglect go hand in hand, and where the distance between the impecunious classes and the rich seems to grow greater year by year; in an empire of peasants where the land yields but a sorry subsistence to the people who cultivate it, -- people in whose minds superstition has more or less usurped the place left vacant by education -- and amid a general population of over a hundred million souls who continue to be held by a church-supported autocracy in a condition of political serfdom. - p. 1-2.


Flow Chart

Flow Chart

Author: John Ashbery

Publisher: Open Road Media

Published: 2014-09-09

Total Pages: 343

ISBN-13: 1480459097

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A quintessentially American epic poem that rewrites all the rules of epic poetry—starting with the one that says epic poetry can’t be about the writing of epic poetry itself The appearance of Flow Chart in 1991 marked the kickoff of a remarkably prolific period in John Ashbery’s long career, a decade during which he published seven all-new books of poetry as well as a collected series of lectures on poetic form and practice. So it comes as no surprise that this book-length poem—one of the longest ever written by an American poet—reads like a rocket launch: charged, propulsive, mesmerizing, a series of careful explosions that, together, create a radical forward motion. It’s been said that Flow Chart was written in response to a dare of sorts: Artist and friend Trevor Winkfield suggested that Ashbery write a poem of exactly one hundred pages, a challenge that Ashbery took up with plans to complete the poem in one hundred days. But the celebrated work that ultimately emerged from its squared-off origin story was one that the poet himself called “a continuum, a diary.” In six connected, constantly surprising movements of free verse—with the famous “sunflower” double sestina thrown in, just to reinforce the poem’s own multivarious logic—Ashbery’s poem maps a path through modern American consciousness with all its attendant noise, clamor, and signal: “Words, however, are not the culprit. They are at worst a placebo, / leading nowhere (though nowhere, it must be added, can sometimes be a cozy / place, preferable in many cases to somewhere).”


Language in Literature

Language in Literature

Author: Roman Jakobson

Publisher: Harvard University Press

Published: 1987

Total Pages: 560

ISBN-13: 9780674510289

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Essays discuss realism, futurism, Dada, the grammar of poetry, Baudelaire, Shakespeare, Yeats, Turgenev, Pasternak, Blake, and semiotic theory.


Wonderlands of the Avant-Garde

Wonderlands of the Avant-Garde

Author: Julia Vaingurt

Publisher: Northwestern University Press

Published: 2013-05-31

Total Pages: 322

ISBN-13: 0810166526

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In postrevolutionary Russia, as the Soviet government was initiating a program of rapid industrialization, avant-garde artists declared their intent to serve the nascent state and to transform life in accordance with their aesthetic designs. In spite of their professed utilitarianism, however, most avant-gardists created works that can hardly be regarded as practical instruments of societal transformation. Exploring this paradox, Vaingurt claims that the artists’ investment of technology with aesthetics prevented their creations from being fully conscripted into the arsenal of political hegemony. The purposes of avant-garde technologies, she contends, are contemplative rather than constructive. Looking at Meyerhold’s theater, Tatlin’s and Khlebnikov’s architectural designs, Mayakovsky’s writings, and other works from the period, Vaingurt offers an innovative reading of an exceptionally complex moment in the formation of Soviet culture.


The System of Comics

The System of Comics

Author: Thierry Groensteen

Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi

Published: 2007-01-01

Total Pages: 202

ISBN-13: 1604736933

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This edition of Thierry Groensteen's The System of Comics makes available in English a groundbreaking work on comics by one of the medium's foremost scholars. In this book, originally published in France in 1999, Groensteen explains clearly the subtle, complex workings of the medium and its unique way of combining visual, verbal, spatial, and chronological expressions. The author explores the nineteenth-century pioneer Rodolphe Topffer, contemporary Japanese creators, George Herriman's Krazy Kat, and modern American autobiographical comics. The System of Comics uses examples from a wide variety of countries including the United States, England, Japan, France, and Argentina. It describes and analyzes the properties and functions of speech and thought balloons, panels, strips, and pages to examine methodically and insightfully the medium's fundamental processes. From this, Groensteen develops his own coherent, overarching theory of comics, a "system" that both builds on existing studies of the "word and image" paradigm and adds innovative approaches of his own. Examining both meaning and appreciation, the book provides a wealth of ideas that will challenge the way scholars approach the study of comics. By emphasizing not simply "storytelling techniques" but also the qualities of the printed page and the reader's engagement, the book's approach is broadly applicable to all forms of interpreting this evolving art.


Poems

Poems

Author: Constantine Cavafy

Publisher: Harvard University Press

Published: 2011

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780674053267

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C. P. Cavafy is one of the most important Greek poets since antiquity. He set in motion the most powerful modernism in early twentieth-century European poetry, exhibiting simple truths about eroticism, history, and philosophy. The Canon plays with the complexities of ironic Socratic thought, suffused with the honesty of unadorned iambic verse.


Once a Grand Duke

Once a Grand Duke

Author: Grand Duke Alexander of Russia

Publisher: Pickle Partners Publishing

Published: 2017-06-28

Total Pages: 315

ISBN-13: 1787205525

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Alexander lived in Paris when he wrote his memoirs, Once a Grand Duke, which were first published in 1932. It is a rich source of dynastical and court life in Imperial Russia’s last half century, and Alexander also describes time spent as guest of the future Abyssinian Emperor Ras Tafari. “The history of the last fifty turbulent years of the Russian Empire provides only a background, but is not the subject of this book. “In compiling this record of a grand duke’s progress I relied on memory only, all my letters, diaries and other documents having been partly burned by me and partly confiscated by the revolutionaries during the years of 1917 and 1918 in the Crimea.”—Alexander, Grand Duke of Russia, Foreword