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From Ecclesiastes to Simone Weil - Ernest Rubinstein - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Selected Poetry and Prose of Edmond Holmes - John Howlett - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

The Lady on the Drawingroom Floor - Mary Elizabeth Coleridge - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

The Lady on the Drawingroom Floor - Mary Elizabeth Coleridge - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Goliarda Sapienza in Context - - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Ideology in the Poetry of Sylvia Plath - Ikram Hili - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

The Theater of Terrence McNally - Raymond Jean Frontain - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

The Theater of Terrence McNally - Raymond Jean Frontain - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Great War Modernism - - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Great War Modernism - - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Acknowledged Legislator - - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Beyond Uncle Tom's Cabin - Sylvia Mayer - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Beyond Uncle Tom's Cabin - Sylvia Mayer - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Ever since feminist scholarship began to reintroduce Harriet Beecher Stowe''s writings to the American Literary canon in the 1970s, critical interest in her work has steadily increased. Rediscovery and ultimate canonization, however, have concentrated to a large extent on her major novelistic achievement, Uncle Tom''s Cabin (1852). Only in recent years have critics begun to focus more seriously on the wide variety of her work and started to create knowledge that broadens our understanding. Beyond Uncle Tom''s Cabin: The Writings of Harriet Beecher Stowe, edited by Sylvia Mayer and Monika Mueller, shows that during her long writing and publishing career, Stowe was a highly prolific writer who targeted diverse audiences, dealt with drastically changing economic, commercial, and cultural contexts, and wrote in a diversity of genres.Reflecting a recent trend to move Stowe''s other texts to the fore, the essays collected in this volume thus go beyond the critical focus on Uncle Tom''s Cabin. They focus on several of Stowe''s other texts that have also significantly contributed to American literary and cultural history, among them her New England novels, her New York City novels, and her fictional writings on religious differences between Europe and the United States. The essays in the first part of Beyond Uncle Tom''s Cabin concentrate on Stowe''s language use, her rhetoric and choices of narrative technique and style, while the essays in the second part concentrate on thematic issues such as the representation of race, ethnicity, and religion, her participation in the emerging environmentalist movement, and Stowe''s response to major economic shifts after the Civil War.

DKK 459.00
1

Division and Imagined Unity in the American Renaissance - Shawn Thomson - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Division and Imagined Unity in the American Renaissance - Shawn Thomson - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

In examining the era’s multivalent tropes of seams and seamlessness, Thomson provides an innovative understanding of the interplay between division and unity in the thought, culture, and literature of the American Renaissance. New insights are offered on works by major authors such as Nathaniel Hawthorne, Frederick Douglass, Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, Emily Dickinson, Henry David Thoreau, Solomon Northup, Harriet Jacobs, and Elizabeth Stoddard, along with marginal figures. Thomson expands the canon by recovering the unknown authors Charles Edward Anthon and John S. Sauzade and recognizing their works as vital to the American Renaissance. Taking the 1844 display of the Holy Tunic at the Cathedral of Treves as its point of departure, Thomson sheds light on the controversy of the seamless garment in the New England press and explores its transmutation in Anthon’s Pilgrimage to Treves, Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, Dickinson’s poetry, and Melville’s major novels. In excavating seamlessness as a cultural artifact of the American Renaissance, Thomson pursues a cultural studies approach to the fabric of antebellum life. Thomson reads the seams of material culture to reveal the meaning of the dressing gown and the keepsake in Dickinson’s and Stoddard’s lives and letters. Thomson positions Sauzade’s Dickensian novel The Spuytenduyvel Chronicle as one of the first great works of the American metropolis and explores the spiritual-material dichotomy of the slave narratives of Douglass, Jacobs, and Northup. This book further reassesses the bitter literary rivalry between Melville and George Washington Peck, re-conceptualizes Melville the author through his relationship to the divided nation, and illuminates his failed idealism as a literary artist in Pierre. Thomson’s approach to the interrelationship of material culture, technology, and the modes of literary production creates a new sense of the American Renaissance as a paradoxical seamless whole wherein its seams are exposed for all to see.

DKK 980.00
1

Italian Women's Autobiographical Writings in the Twentieth Century - Ursula Fanning - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Italian Women's Autobiographical Writings in the Twentieth Century - Ursula Fanning - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

This book highlights the centrality of the autobiographical enterprise to Italian women’s writing through the twentieth century—a century that has frequently been referred to as the century of the self. Ursula Fanning addresses the thorny issue of essentialism potentially involved in underlining links between women’s writing and autobiographical modes, and ultimately rejects it in favor of an argument based on the cultural, linguistic, and literary marginalization of women writers within the Italian context. It is concerned with Italian women writers’ various ways of grappling with constructions of subjectivity throughout the century and sets out to explore them. Fanning reads autobiographical writing as subject to many of the same constraints as fiction and, in doing so, draws attention to the significance of the recurring use of the terms “pure” and “impure” in many critical and theoretical discussions of the autobiographical (where “pure” is used to suggest a truthful representation of a life, while “impure” suggests the messy undertaking of mixing lived experience with fiction).Recurring patterns and paradigms are found in the works of the various writers considered (eighteen in all), and these paradigms are analyzed through close readings of their works. These close readings offer insights into approaches to the constructions of subjectivity in the narratives and are informed by feminist theories. The chapters focus on selves in relationship, taking their lead from the patterns unfolding in the writers’ work, hence the subjects are constructed as daughters (with different views of the self in relation to fathers and mothers), within the confines of the romantic relationship (which involves reconsiderations and rewritings of the romance plot), as maternal subjects, and as writers (with an eye on their relationship to the literary canon, as well as to the relationship with readers).This book argues that there is such a thing as gendered subjectivity and that its constructions may be traced through the texts analyzed.

DKK 848.00
1

Italian Women's Autobiographical Writings in the Twentieth Century - Ursula Fanning - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Italian Women's Autobiographical Writings in the Twentieth Century - Ursula Fanning - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

This book highlights the centrality of the autobiographical enterprise to Italian women’s writing through the twentieth century—a century that has frequently been referred to as the century of the self. Ursula Fanning addresses the thorny issue of essentialism potentially involved in underlining links between women’s writing and autobiographical modes, and ultimately rejects it in favor of an argument based on the cultural, linguistic, and literary marginalization of women writers within the Italian context. It is concerned with Italian women writers’ various ways of grappling with constructions of subjectivity throughout the century and sets out to explore them. Fanning reads autobiographical writing as subject to many of the same constraints as fiction and, in doing so, draws attention to the significance of the recurring use of the terms “pure” and “impure” in many critical and theoretical discussions of the autobiographical (where “pure” is used to suggest a truthful representation of a life, while “impure” suggests the messy undertaking of mixing lived experience with fiction).Recurring patterns and paradigms are found in the works of the various writers considered (eighteen in all), and these paradigms are analyzed through close readings of their works. These close readings offer insights into approaches to the constructions of subjectivity in the narratives and are informed by feminist theories. The chapters focus on selves in relationship, taking their lead from the patterns unfolding in the writers’ work, hence the subjects are constructed as daughters (with different views of the self in relation to fathers and mothers), within the confines of the romantic relationship (which involves reconsiderations and rewritings of the romance plot), as maternal subjects, and as writers (with an eye on their relationship to the literary canon, as well as to the relationship with readers).This book argues that there is such a thing as gendered subjectivity and that its constructions may be traced through the texts analyzed.

DKK 397.00
1

Dacia Maraini’s Narratives of Survival - Tommasina Gabriele - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Dacia Maraini’s Narratives of Survival - Tommasina Gabriele - Bog - Fairleigh Dickinson University Press - Plusbog.dk

Dacia Maraini’s Narratives of Survival: (Re)Constructed focuses on Dacia Maraini’s narrative from about 1984 to 2004 and makes substantive use of her interviews and essays. While acknowledging the importance and ongoing validity of feminist scholarship of Maraini’s work, this book seeks to take scholarship on Maraini beyond feminist readings by identifying a critical framework that cuts across gender and genre and thereby invites alternative readings. Using a method of close textual analysis, the author includes studies of men, children, animals, and imaginary characters in Maraini’s narrative, analyzes language, character, motifs, and symbols, and considers some of Maraini’s work in light of declining postmodern and emerging posthuman critical social theory. This critical framework identifies the paradigm of reconstruction as narrative center, both strategy and theme, of many of Maraini’s works from this twenty-year-period and beyond. Reconstruction here signifies the strategies by which Maraini’s deep investment in survival, which has its roots in the life threatening conditions she experienced as a small child in a WWII Japanese concentration camp, is enacted in a narrative re-building and re-constructing of personal memory, of various personal, social and political histories, of motherhood and maternal discourses, of crime stories, of postmodern fragmentation, and even of the process of erasure itself. Maraini’s narrative is deeply attentive to the mechanisms that threaten survival of the body (and not just the woman’s body); psychological and aesthetic survival; the survival in the Italian canon of a woman author’s work, memory and legacy after her death; the survival of a drug-addicted and self-destructive younger generation; and by extension, collective and ecological survival. Never marked by nihilism or despair, Maraini’s narratives offer the ethos of reconstruction as a variation on the “begin again” that marks the end of many of her novels and, as we can see in Colomba, her own aesthetic process of renewal and regeneration. This book focuses primarily on Il treno per Helsinki (1984), Isolina (1985), some of her short stories for children, La nave per Kobe: Diari giapponesi di mia madre (2001), Buio (Strega Literary Prize, 1999), and Colomba (2004).

DKK 742.00
1