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| 洋書ダウンロードフロア >Literary Criticism | |||||||||||
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| 131:「Court Poetry in Late Medieval England and Scotland」 | ||||
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This book explores the anxious and unstable relationship between court poetry and various forms of authority, political and cultural, in England and Scotland at the beginning of the sixteenth century. Through poems by Skelton, Dunbar, Douglas, Hawes, Lyndsay and Barclay, it examines the paths by which court poetry and its narrators seek multiple forms of legitimation: from royal and institutional sources, but also in the media of script and print. The book is the first for some time to treat Engl | |||
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| 132:「Russian Village Prose」 | ||||
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Kathleen Parth offers the first comprehensive examination of the controversial literary movement Russian Village Prose. From the 1950s to the decline of the movement in the 1970s, Valentin Rasputin, Fedor Abramov, and other writers drew on ”luminous” memories of their rural childhoods to evoke a thousand-year-old pattern of life that was disappearing as they wrote. In their lyrical descriptions of a vanishing world, they expressed nostalgia for Russia’s past and fears for the nation’s future; the | |||
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| 133:「Mappings」 | ||||
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In this powerful work, Susan Friedman moves feminist theory out of paralyzing debates about us and them, white and other, first and third world, and victimizers and victims. Throughout, Friedman adapts current cultural theory from global and transnational studies, anthropology, and geography to challenge modes of thought that exaggerate the boundaries of gender, race, ethnicity, sexuality, class, and national origin. The author promotes a transnational and heterogeneous feminism, which, she | |||
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| 134:「The Columbia Anthology of Chinese Folk and Popular Literature」 | ||||
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In The Columbia Anthology of Chinese Folk and Popular Literature, two of the world’s leading sinologists, Victor H. Mair and Mark Bender, capture the breadth of China’s oral-based literary heritage. This collection presents works drawn from the large body of oral literature of many of China’s recognized ethnic groups—including the Han, Yi, Miao, Tu, Daur, Tibetan, Uyghur, and Kazak—and the selections include a variety of genres. Chapters cover folk stories, songs, rituals | |||
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| 135:「Narrating the News」 | ||||
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In this scholarly examination of new journalism, Roggenkamp examines five major stories featured in three respected New York newspapers during the 1890s to illustrate how new journalism manipulated specific segments of the literary marketplace. These case studies are complemented by broader cultural analyses that touch on vital topics in literary and cultural studies. | |||
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| 136:「Most Succinctly Bred」 | ||||
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The Chaplain’s Assistant: God, Country, and Vietnam, is ”nothing like any Vietnam story you’ve read before.” Caldwell manages to capture the country, the war, and the people caught up in it in a way that is emotional, profane, sexy and heart-breaking. This is JT Caldwell’s debut novel and is a next generation war memoir - one without battles, bullets or air strikes, but as grim and realistic as the war it documents. The Midwest Review called the book ”solid and riveting reading,” and it | |||
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| 137:「Deadly Musings」 | ||||
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”Violent scenes in American fiction are not only brutal, bleak, and gratuitous,” writes Michael Kowalewski. ”They are also, by turns, comic, witty, poignant, and sometimes, strangely enough, even terrifyingly beautiful.” In this fascinating tour of American fiction, Kowalewski examines incidents ranging from scalpings and torture in The Deerslayer to fish feeding off human viscera in To Have and Have Not, to show how highly charged descriptive passages bear on major issues concerning a wri | |||
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| 138:「Outsiders Together」 | ||||
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The marriage of Virginia and Leonard Woolf is best understood as a dialogue of two outsiders about ideas of social and political belonging and exclusion. These ideas infused the written work of both partners and carried over into literary modernism itself, in part through the influence of the Woolfs’ groundbreaking publishing company, the Hogarth Press. In this book, the first to focus on Virginia Woolf’s writings in conjunction with those of her husband, Natania Rosenfeld illuminates Leonard’s sen | |||
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| 139:「Another Day at the Front」 | ||||
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An irreverent, brilliant, politically charged barrage of essays aimed with Reed’s famous vitriol and wit at the perpetrators of America’s war on blacks. | |||
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| 140:「On Psychological Prose」 | ||||
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Comparable in importance to Mikhail Bakhtin, Lydia Ginzburg distinguished herself among Soviet literary critics through her investigation of the social and historical elements that relate verbal art to life in a particular culture. Her work speaks directly to those Western critics who may find that deconstructionist and psychoanalytical strategies by themselves are incapable of addressing the full meaning of literature. Here, in her first book to be translated into English, Ginzburg examines the recipr | |||
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