Nay Rather

Nay Rather

Author: Anne Carson

Publisher: Sylph Editions

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781909631038

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This cahier unites two texts by celebrated Canadian poet Anne Carson, encouraging readers to experience them alongside and illuminating each other. Variations on the Right to Remain Silent is an essay on the stakes involved when translation happens, ranging from Homer through Joan of Arc to Paul Celan; it includes the author s seven translations of a poetic fragment from the Greek poet Ibykos. By Chance the Cycladic People is a poem about Cycladic culture where the order of the lines has been determined by a random number generator. The cahier is illustrated by Lanfranco Quadrio."


Complete Manual of Parsing

Complete Manual of Parsing

Author: William Davidson

Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand

Published: 2023-11-18

Total Pages: 210

ISBN-13: 3385225132

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Reprint of the original, first published in 1875.


Violence and Belief in Late Antiquity

Violence and Belief in Late Antiquity

Author: Thomas Sizgorich

Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 414

ISBN-13: 9780812241136

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In Violence and Belief in Late Antiquity, Thomas Sizgorich seeks to understand why and how violent expressions of religious devotion became central to the self-understandings of both Christian and Muslim communities between the fourth and ninth centuries. Sizgorich argues that the cultivation of violent martyrdom as a path to holiness was in no way particular to Islam; rather, it emerged from a matrix put into place by the Christians of late antiquity. Paying close attention to the role of memory and narrative in the formation of individual and communal selves, Sizgorich identifies a common pool of late ancient narrative forms upon which both Christian and Muslim communities drew. In the process of recollecting the past, Sizgorich explains, Christian and Muslim communities alike elaborated iterations of Christianity or Islam that demanded of each believer a willingness to endure or inflict violence on God's behalf and thereby created militant local pieties that claimed to represent the one "real" Christianity or the only "pure" form of Islam. These militant communities used a shared system of signs, symbols, and stories, stories in which the faithful manifested their purity in conflict with the imperial powers of the world.