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  • av John Miles Foley
    411

    An examination of the artistic implications that oral tradition holds for the understanding of the "Iliad" and "Odyssey", in order to establish a context for their original performance and modern-day reception. It disentangles the interwoven strands of orality, textuality and art.

  • - Female Identity Quests from Stendhal to Morgner
    av Helga Druxes
    411

  • - From Bonaventure to MacIntyre
    av Douglas C. Langston
    411

    This work synthesizes a broad range of historical and contemporary literature dealing with conscience. It traces the development of the notion of conscience in the western philosophical tradition and rehabilitates conscience as a useful, even crucial, concept for ethical theory.

  • - Literature and Public Values
    av James Engell
    407,-

  • - Burial and the Afterlife in the Merovingian World
    av Bonnie Effros
    440,-

    The relationship between the living and the dead was significant in defining community identity and spiritual belief in the early Medieval world. This text reveals the social significance of burial rites in early Medieval Europe during the time of the Merovingian kings from 500 to 800 C.E.

  • av Emil Staiger
    479,-

  • - The Journals and Letters of 1806
     
    411

  • - Pennsylvania Germans in the Early Republic
    av Steven M. Nolt
    411

    An examination of how the German Lutheran and Reformed populations of eastern Pennsylvania integrated themselves successfully into the early American republic. Their story illuminates the path that other immigrants and ethnic Americans would travel in the decades to follow.

  • - An Introduction
    av Shirley Drake Professor of the Humanities) Staley & Lynn (Harrington
    411

    The Shepheardes Calender is the poem that launched Edmund Spenser''s career and changed the direction of English poetry. In this reappraisal, Lynn Staley Johnson demonstrates that Spenser himself made a self-conscious effort to create a new literature, a new esthetic for a new era. Drawing upon a wide range of primary sources, she places the poem in its literary, social, political , and cultural context, contributing to our understanding of the relationship between Speser and his times. She pays particular attention to the emergence of the myth of Elizabeth and of England during the first half of Elizabeth''s reign and the ways in which the young Spenser manipulated the concerns and issues of the time, transforming popular culture into literary expression.By its active engagement with both the present and the past, the Calender suggests Spenser''s conception of poetry as informed dialogue designed for social work, offering a reinterpretation of the relationship between the poet and his community. Choosing not to be circumscribed by the voices of his significant historical and literary past, the Calender proclaims the poet, not as transmitter or mediator, but as an active and shaping force, capable of remaking the present by offering his age a picture of a new and potentially more glorious reality.Johnson seeks to bridge the gap between the literature of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance by linking Spenser''s strategies and themes to those of his medieval forebears, especially Chaucer. Both Edmund Spenser and his enigmatic Calender stand facing two ways, back into the age dubbed "middle" and forward, hailing the new; as it''s study demonstrates, only by bringing these views into a single focus can we begin to appreciate the radical and innovative nature of a poem that for many heralds the renaissance of English poetry.

  • - Philadelphia's Frankford Arsenal, 1816-1870
    av James J. Farley
    411

    Using the growth of the US arsenal at Frankford, Pennsylvania - from a small post to a full-scale industrial complex - as a background, this text examines the changing technology of early 19th-century warfare, the impact it had on the army and the social ramifications of industrialization.

  • av Greg Kucich
    411

    A comprehensive study of the influence Spenser had on the forms, images, and style of the principal Romantic poets and how Spenserianism pervades not just their writings but also the subconscious thinking and spirit of the Romantic era.Edmund Spenser''s tremendous popularity among the Romantics has always been recognized, but his role in their poetics has never been extensively explored because of a widely shared scholarly assumption about the intellectual superficiality of their response to him. Many of the Romantics honored Spenser as their favorite poet, the muse that inspired their own creative ambitions, but their love of him has often been discounted as a fatuous worship of the beauty of his work in total disregard of his thought. Kucich shows how this stereotype has been based on several notorious statements about Spenser that do not fully reflect the range and complexity of the Romantics'' response to him. To measure this response accurately, Kucich has uncovered a wealth of commentary on Spenser in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. He reveals how Spenserianism became a cultural tradition in the eighteenth century that eventually developed into and helped sustain a habit of mind that is central to Romantic poetics---the open-ended interior debate that many leading Romantic scholars are now discussing as the principal conditioning force in Romantic poetics.

  • - The Unhappy Life and Times of Matt Cvetic
    av Daniel J. Leab
    382,-

  • - A Study of Cervantes's Don Quixote, Part II
    av Henry (Tulane) Sullivan
    411

    Cervantes''s great novel Don Quixote is a diptych, the first part of which was published in 1605 and the second in 1615. Focusing almost entirely on the novel''s second part, Henry W. Sullivan is the first critic to offer a systematic account of Don Quixote''s passage from madness to sanity. Sullivan argues that Part II of the novel is a salvation epic, within which the Cave of Montesinos episode is the single most important pivot in the Knight''s confrontation with his own emotional difficulties.In this carefully researched and challenging study, Sullivan shows that chapters 22-24 (the Cave of Montesinos episode) represent an entrance into Purgatory, while chapter 55 is the exit from this realm. The Knight and his Squire are made to suffer excruciating torments in the chapters in between, experiencing a Purgatory in this life. This original reading of the book is coupled with an explanation that this Purgatory is "grotesque" since Don Quixote''s and Sancho''s sins are venial and can thus be cleansed by theological means against a background of comedy. By combining these two aspects, Sullivan exposes both the deeply agonizing and the comic aspects of the text. In addition, the combination of theological interpretation and Lacanian analysis to show Don Quixote''s salvation/cure in this life results in a truly comprehensive vision of the Knight''s progress. Sullivan also summarizes, in five different streams of critical tradition, the accumulated reception history of the Cave of Montesinos incident, drawing on scholarly writings from the nineteenth century to the present.

  • - The Wartime Intelligence Reports of Allen Dulles, 1942-1945
    av Nancy H. Petersen
    541,-

    For three years during World War II, future Director of Central Intelligence Allen Dulles commanded the OSS mission in Bern, Switzerland. From Hitler''s Doorstep provides an annotated selection of his reports to Washington from 1942 to 1945. Dulles was a leading source of Allied intelligence on Nazi Germany and the occupied nations. The messages presented in this volume were based on information received through agents and networks operating in France, Italy, Austria, Eastern Europe, and Germany itself. They deal with subjects ranging from enemy troop strength and military plans to political developments, support of resistance movements, secret weapons, psychological warfare, and peace feelers. The Dulles reports reveal his own vision of grand strategy and presage the postwar turmoil in Europe.One of the largest collections of OSS records ever published, these telegrams and radiotelephone transmissions from the National Archives provide an exciting account of the course of the European war, offer insight on the development of American intelligence, and illuminate the origins of the Cold War. They will interest diplomatic and military historians as well as specialists on modern Europe. This volume is almost unique as document-based intelligence history and serves as a badly needed bridge between diplomatic history and intelligence studies.

  • - Biology, Prejudice, and Genocide
    av Richard M. Lerner
    411

  • - Phantasm, Melancholy, and Didacticism in "Celestina"
    av Ricardo Castells
    411

    An examination of the themes of love, medicine and dreams in the late mediaeval Spanish masterpiece, "Celestina". It explores the European cultural and literary tradition to discover theoretical approaches to the physiology of lovesickness and its dreams and visions.

  • - A Study of Miracles in the Roman Imperial Church
    av Rowan A. Greer
    409

    By "the fear of freedom" Greer means the unconscious flight from the heavy burden of individual choice an open society lays upon its members. The miraculous represents a heavenly power brought down to earth and tied to the life of the community. Understanding how miracles were perceived in the late antiquity requires us to put aside the notion of a miracle as the violation of the natural order. "Miracles" for the church fathers refers to anything that evokes wonder. Rowan Greer is not concerned with conclusions about the truth or falsity of the miracles reported in the ancient sources. He is concerned with how the miracle stories shaped the way people understood Christianity in the fourth and fifth centuries.Once the Church gained the predominance in the Empire as part of the Constantinian revolution, most Christians thought that a new Christian commonwealth was int he making. The miracles associated with the cult of the saints (the martyrs and their relics) in the Christian Empire were part of this sacralization. In the Roman imperial church we find a tension between the Christian message, which revolved around virtue and the individual, and corporate piety that focused upon the empowering of the people of God.With Augustine we find Christian Platonism transformed into a "new theology" far more congruent with the corporate poetry that had by then developed. An emphasis upon grace and upon God''s sovereignty fits a preoccupation with miracles better than the old emphasis upon human freedom and virtue and sets the stages for the Western Middle Ages and the cult of the saints, organized and made central to Christian piety.From a study of Roman imperial Christianity before the collapse of the West we discover the tendency to substitute one kind of freedom for another. Freedom as the capacity of human beings to choose the good does not, of course, disappear, but on the whole it is made subordinate to notions of God''s sovereign grace and even to an insistence upon the authority of the church.

  • - Friedrich Nicolai as Bookseller and Publisher in the Age of Enlightenment
    av Pamela E. Selwyn
    479,-

    An account of the working of the 18th-century German book trade as revealed by the career of Friedrich Nicolai (1733-1811). It draws upon Nicolai's correspondence and provides insights into how books came into existence, what tactics prospective authors used, and other matters.

  • av Stephen Crites
    479,-

    Traces the course of Hegel's critical engagement with traditional Christian ideas and practices from his years as a dutiful schoolboy in Stuttgart through his blossoming as a philosopher in Jena.

  • - Essays by Philip Young
    av Philip Young
    411

    A volume of 19 essays by literary critic Philip Young, in which he reveals the "so what?" that he insisted all literary studies ought to have. In three sections, the essays demonstrate his fascination with American myths, examine the writing of Hemingway, and explore other topics in literature.

  • - Indian Immigrants in an American Metropolis
    av Padma Rangaswamy
    411

  • av Mark Peceny
    479,-

    An examination of the promotion of democracy during US military interventions in the 20th century. The work shows this to be one of the central ways in which the US attempts to reconcile the potential contradictions involved in being a liberal great power.

  • av Robert D. Schick
    399,-

  • - A Collection of Mysterious and Invaluable Arts and Remedies, for Man as Well as Animals: Of Their Virtue and Efficacy in Healing Diseases, etc., the Greater Part of Which Was Never Published Until They Appeared in Print for the First Time in the U.S. in t
    av Johann Georg Hohman
    223

  • - Bob Hoffman and the Manly Culture of York Barbell
    av John D. Fair
    493

  • - The Scripture for Humane Kings in the Creation of Chinese Buddhism
    av Charles D. Orzech
    483

    An examination of the relationship between Buddhist notions of transcendence and political authority in East Asia. It provides a discussion of the "Transcendent Wisdom Scripture for Humane Kings Who Want to Protect Their States", along with an annotated translation of this Buddhist text.

  • - Hermits and Monks in the Crusader States
    av Andrew Jotischky
    479,-

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