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Displaying results 1 to 8 of 8.

  1. Politic Words
    Writing Women | Writing History
    Author: Dawe, Gerald
    Published: 2023
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Ltd, International Academic Publishers, Oxford ; Peter Lang International Academic Publishers, Bern

    «Politic Words is an invigorating mix of the personal, the political and the poetic. Gerry Dawe flings his net wide. From Eavan Boland’s ‘secret history’ of women to war memoirist Christabel Bielenberg’s luminous prose; from the vaulting ambition of... more

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    «Politic Words is an invigorating mix of the personal, the political and the poetic. Gerry Dawe flings his net wide. From Eavan Boland’s ‘secret history’ of women to war memoirist Christabel Bielenberg’s luminous prose; from the vaulting ambition of Éilís Dillon’s historical fiction to hunger striker’s Bobby Sands’ favourite poet, the now unsung Ethna Carbery, he takes us on a bracing journey from the Troubles to Brexit. Drawing on contemporaneous criticism, Dawe revitalizes 35 years of cultural history into urgent news from the literary front.»(Mary Morrissy, Novelist and former associate director of the writing programme, University College Cork)Politic Words reflects five decades of writing about and discussing Irish literature, both inside the university classroom and in various literary and academic forums. Part one concentrates upon Irish women writers, their influence and example including Edna Longley, Eavan Boland and Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin alongside the achievements of younger contemporaries such as Lucy Caldwell and Leontia Flynn. Part two develops some of the historical settings and themes of part one while exploring the social and political legacies of traumatic Irish historical events such as the Great Famine, and its representation in the fiction of William Carleton and reimagined by later interpreters including Benedict Kiely. The collection concludes with a series of readings of Irish culture and politics in terms of the legacy of the Troubles, the impact on Ireland of Brexit and renewed calls for Irish reunification. Politic Words is the final part of a trilogy of studies by Gerald Dawe published by Peter Lang in their Reimagining Ireland series. Politic Words is an invigorating mix of the personal, the political and the poetic. Gerry Dawe flings his net wide. From Eavan Boland’s “secret history” of women to war memoirist Christabel Bielenberg’s luminous prose; from the vaulting ambition of Éilís Dillon’s historical fiction to hunger striker’s Bobby Sands’ favourite poet, the now unsung Ethna Carbery, he takes us on a bracing journey from the Troubles to Brexit. Drawing on contemporaneous criticism, Dawe revitalizes 35 years of cultural history into urgent news from the literary front.Mary Morrissy...

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Maher, Eamon (Herausgeber)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781803742601
    Other identifier:
    DDC Categories: 820
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    Series: Reimagining Ireland ; 124
    Subjects: Englisch; Historische Literatur; Frauenliteratur; Dawe; Eamon; Gerald; GERALD DAWE; History; Irish literature; Irish women writers; IRISH WOMEN WRITING; Maher; Mason; Politic; POLITIC WORDS; The social and political legacies of traumatic Irish historical events; Tony; Women; Writing; WRITING HISTORY; WRITING WOMEN / WRITING HISTORY
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (208 Seiten), , EPDF
  2. Zone Theory
    Science Fiction and Utopia in the Space of Possible Worlds
    Published: 2023
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Ltd, International Academic Publishers, Oxford ; Peter Lang International Academic Publishers, Bern

    «This book elaborates a structure for the general family of utopian genres with marvelous clarity, and with it established, Popov can pursue all kinds of further insights about the relationships between these texts. As the world’s situation becomes... more

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    «This book elaborates a structure for the general family of utopian genres with marvelous clarity, and with it established, Popov can pursue all kinds of further insights about the relationships between these texts. As the world’s situation becomes more desperate, and the need for a new political economy more obvious, this complicated canon is becoming increasingly important: no longer just a minor literary genre, but rather a crucial aid to thinking about our social systems. The better we understand utopian narrative strategies, the more fully we can put them to use, so Popov’s excellent study is timely and interesting.»(Kim Stanley Robinson, author of the Mars Trilogy and The Ministry for the Future)«Alexander Popov’s Zone Theory deftly guides us through the thickets of utopian theory and shows us why we should care, with fresh and convincing readings of a variety of science fictional texts. The writers explored here range from the usual suspects—Le Guin, Delany, Kim Stanley Robinson—to some not usually classed as utopian or dystopian, such as John Crowley and Brooke Bolander. Popov builds on the work of Tom Moylan and Fredric Jameson while adding important perspectives such as considering utopia as a hyperobject and using utopian theory to read the incongruous, unresolvable Zones of science fiction such as the Strugatskys’ Roadside Picnic and Jeff VanderMeer’s Southern Reach trilogy. I am happy to do as Popov suggests: to read utopias not only as ongoing processes rather than finished blueprints, as Moylan has taught us, but also to see them as a way of learning about the world. Utopia, says Popov, is "an apparatus for registering difference at the level of societal organization" and thus is always open to new discoveries and new antinomies: anti-utopias lead to anti-anti-utopias and so on without end.»(Brian Attebery, Emeritus Professor of English and Philosophy at Idaho State University, author of Stories about Stories: Fantasy & the Remaking of Myth)Zone Theory reinterprets utopia as an unceasing dialectic between totality and novelty which keeps on discovering new subjectivities and genres. Through close readings within a wide corpus of SF works, it meditates on utopian forms such as critical utopia, critical dystopia, heterotopia, atopia and ecotopia, ultimately tying them to the notion of anti-anti-utopia: a form of forms capacious enough to house a permanently open multiplicity of beings. “This book elaborates a structure for the general family of utopian genres with marvelous clarity, and with it established, Popov can pursue all kinds of further insights about the relationships between these texts. As the world’s situation becomes more desperate, and the need for a new political economy more obvious, this complicated canon is becoming increasingly important: no longer just a minor literary genre, but rather a crucial aid to thinking about our social systems. The better we understand utopian narrative strategies, the more fully we can put them to use, so Popov’s excellent study is timely and interesting.”Kim Stanley Robinson, author of the Mars Trilogy and The Ministry for the Future"Alexander Popov’s Zone Theory deftly guides us through the thickets of utopian theory and shows us why we should care, with fresh and convincing readings of a variety of science fictional texts. The writers explored here range from the usual suspects—Le Guin, Delany, Kim Stanley Robinson—to some not usually classed as utopian or dystopian, such as John Crowley and Brooke Bolander. Popov builds on the work of Tom Moylan and Fredric Jameson while adding important perspectives such as considering utopia as a hyperobject and using utopian theory to read the incongruous, unresolvable Zones of science fiction such as the Strugatskys’ Roadside Picnic and Jeff VanderMeer’s Southern Reach trilogy. I am happy to do as Popov suggests: to read utopias not only as ongoing processes rather than finished blueprints, as Moylan has taught us, but also to see them as a way of learning about the world. Utopia, says Popov, is “an apparatus for registering difference at the level of societal organization” and thus is always open to new discoveries and new antinomies: anti-utopias lead to anti-anti-utopias and so on without end."Brian Attebery, Emeritus Professor of English and Philosophy at Idaho State University, author of Stories about Stories: Fantasy & the Remaking of Myth...

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Baccolini, Raffaella (Herausgeber); Balasopoulos, Antonis (Herausgeber); Fischer, Joachim (Herausgeber); Kelly, Michael G. (Herausgeber); Moylan, Tom (Herausgeber); Wegner, Phillip E. (Herausgeber)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781800794399
    Other identifier:
    RVK Categories: EC 6745 ; EC 6855
    DDC Categories: 800; 420
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    Series: Ralahine Utopian Studies ; 28
    Subjects: Science-Fiction-Literatur; Utopie; Ecocriticism; Posthumanismus; Alexander; Alexander Popov; Antonis; Baccolini; Balasopoulos; dystopian studies; ecocriticism; Fiction; Fischer; Joachim; Kelly; Mason; Michael; Moylan; Phillip; Popov; posthumanism; Raffaella; Ralahine Utopian Studies; Science; Science Fiction and Utopia in the Space of Possible Worlds; science fictional studies; Space; Theory; Tony; Utopia; Utopian studies; Wegner; Worlds; Zone; Zone Theory
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (368 Seiten), Illustrationen
  3. The Art of the Unspoken
    Rhetorical Devices, Linguistic Parallels and the Influence of the Singing Voice in Classical and Romantic Piano Literature
    Published: 2023
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Ltd, International Academic Publishers, Oxford ; Peter Lang International Academic Publishers, Bern

    How can musical meaning be conveyed without words? Starting with the landscape in which instrumental music developed traits parallel to language, this book explores a performance framework that connects qualities derived from rhetorical and dramatic... more

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    How can musical meaning be conveyed without words? Starting with the landscape in which instrumental music developed traits parallel to language, this book explores a performance framework that connects qualities derived from rhetorical and dramatic elements and the model of the singing voice in Classical and Romantic solo piano music. These traditions were shared by composers, performers and pedagogues but have gradually fallen into obscurity. Rhetoric provides a guide for logical organization and persuasion, dramatic plot and character influence form and musical content, while singing offers a natural model for expression and inflection. Historical and aesthetic information along with literary and musical aspects are presented here to inform current performance practice.Composers consciously employed rhetorical figures and expected performers to recognize and apply them in performance. Thinking of music in terms of plot and character cultivates habits of purposeful direction and clear definition of individual thematic material. Literary comparisons inspire the imagination and can be useful in addressing more complex aesthetic issues, such as organic quality in art, the concept of unity in diversity, memory, evolution and incompleteness. The desire to achieve vocal expressivity at the keyboard is a unifying factor that transcends the differences between varying types of pianos across time. These concepts have practical application to modern performance training, and a wider pianistic pedagogical context is explored in the final chapter, advocating for an integrated and meaningful approach to performance.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Hunt, Una (Herausgeber)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781800797765
    Other identifier:
    DDC Categories: 780
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    Series: Performance Research: Ireland ; 1
    Subjects: Klaviermusik; Sprache; Rhetorik; Singstimme; Classical; Classical and romantic solo piano music; Devices; Gabriela; Hunt; Influence; Influence of rhetoric, dramatic concepts, and the singing voice in piano music; Linguistic; Literature; Mason; Mayer; Music and Language; Parallels; Performance Research; Historical Piano Pedagogy; Piano; Rhetorical; Romantic; Singing; Tony; Unspoken; Vocal expressivity on the keyboard; Voice
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (214 Seiten), Illustrationen
  4. A Deep Well of Want
    Visualising the World of John McGahern
    Author: Butler, Paul
    Published: 2023
    Publisher:  Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, Oxford ; Peter Lang International Academic Publishers, Bern

    «Paul Butler’s monograph is a wonderful illustration of how a visual reading of McGahern can reveal previously undiscovered aspects of the writer’s aesthetic approach. ‘The Deep Well of Want’ of the title is an expression that captures the pain and... more

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    «Paul Butler’s monograph is a wonderful illustration of how a visual reading of McGahern can reveal previously undiscovered aspects of the writer’s aesthetic approach. ‘The Deep Well of Want’ of the title is an expression that captures the pain and hurt at the core of the life journey of both writer and photographer. Paul’s exquisite photos allow us a special entry into ‘McGahern Land’, whose landscape and people nurtured the writer’s creative inspiration. This indispensable study will deepen McGahern readers’ understanding of what lies at the core of his artistic quest.»(Eamon Maher, TU Dublin)This book represents a unique visualisation of the world of Irish writer John McGahern through his words and the imagery of artist Paul Butler. Traumatic events in the lives of both McGahern and Butler shaped their paths, creating a want to write in McGahern and a want to create imagery in Butler. Butler explores the difficult and complex childhood that the two shared, and through a series of beautiful images that he himself has created in McGahern’s own part of Ireland, he draws parallels between them and, as Eamonn Wall says in his Preface, produces a rich and life-affirming appreciation of literature, art and imagery.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Maher, Eamon (Herausgeber)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781800798113
    Other identifier:
    DDC Categories: 820; 420
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    Series: Reimagining Ireland ; 122
    Subjects: Visuelle Wahrnehmung <Motiv>; A Deep Well of Want; Art; Butler; Deep; Eamon; Ireland; John; John McGahern; Landscape; Leitrim; Maher; Mason; McGahern; Paul; Paul Butler; Photography; Place; Ritual; Tony; Tourism; Visualising; Visualising the World of John McGahern; Well
    Other subjects: McGahern, John (1934-2006)
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (244 Seiten), Illustrationen
  5. Stages of Madness
    Sin, Sickness and Seneca in Shakespearean Drama
    Published: 2023
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Ltd, Oxford ; Peter Lang International Academic Publishers, Bern

    «Stages of Madness is an important new study of the representation of madness on the early modern English stage. Rigorously researched yet also highly readable, Andrew J. Power’s book provides original and compelling close readings of early modern... more

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    «Stages of Madness is an important new study of the representation of madness on the early modern English stage. Rigorously researched yet also highly readable, Andrew J. Power’s book provides original and compelling close readings of early modern plays such as The Spanish Tragedy and Hamlet while establishing a lineage of ideas about madness stemming from classical and medieval drama.» (Dr Rory Loughnane, Reader in Early Modern Studies, University of Kent)   «Power propels the reader through an enlightened tour of madness. From the Bedlam-laden performance of Edgar in King Lear, through the schism-inflected demonic possession of The Comedy of Errors, to the furious revenges of Titus Andronicus, this book asks the biggest questions imaginable about the evolution of cultural understandings of how mind relates to self and how notions of sanity are constructed through the reflection of madness in religious and medical contexts.» (Dr Timothy Ryan Day, Associate Professor of English, Saint Louis University – Madrid Campus)   In re-evaluating the contemporary staging of madness in the early modern period this book provides a clearer understanding and interpretation of characters who suffer from mental and emotional extremities in Shakespearean drama. It addresses three factors that contribute to early modern concepts of madness. These are theories of the «self» current and emergent in the late-sixteenth and early-seventeenth centuries; contemporary medical writings on madness; and the legacy of portrayals of madness from classical Greek and Roman drama, with a particular focus on the Roman tragedian, Seneca. The more complete understanding that this combined approach provides, facilitates a better-informed reading of Shakespeare’s plays, plays that so often deal with mental and emotional extremities that were once thought of as «madness». Blurbs for Stages of Madness: sin, sickness and Seneca in Shakespearean drama Stages of Madness is an important new study of the representation of madness on the early modern English stage. Rigorously researched yet also highly readable, Power's book provides original and compelling close readings of early modern plays such as The Spanish Tragedy and Hamlet while establishing a lineage of ideas about madness stemming from classical and medieval drama. Stages of Madness should be considered required reading for anyone interested in early modern drama as well as in premodern medical practice and intellectual history. Dr Rory Loughnane, Reader in Early Modern Studies, University of Kent Stages of Madness is an absolute must for the early modern bookshelf. Andrew J. Power propels the reader through an enlightened tour of madness. From the Bedlam-laden performance of Edgar in King Lear, through the schism-inflected demonic possession of The Comedy of Errors, to the furious revenge of Titus Andronicus, this book asks the biggest questions imaginable about the evolution of cultural understandings of how mind relates to self and how notions of sanity are constructed through the reflection of madness in religious and medical contexts. Dr Timothy Ryan Day, Associate Professor of English, Saint Louis University – Madrid Campus...

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781803740768
    Other identifier:
    RVK Categories: HI 3385
    DDC Categories: 820
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    Subjects: Drama; Wahnsinn <Motiv>; Psychische Störung <Motiv>; Andrew; Anthony; Drama; Early Modern; Early Modern Drama; Madness; Mason; Melancholy; Power; Psychology; Seneca; Shakespeare; Shakespearean; Sickness; Sin; Stages; Theatre
    Other subjects: Shakespeare, William (1564-1616)
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (178 Seiten), Illustrationen
  6. A Stubborn Ghost
    Essays in Honor of Henry W. Sullivan
    Contributor: Lauer, A. Robert (Herausgeber); Galoppe, Raúl A. (Herausgeber)
    Published: 2023
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Inc., New York ; Peter Lang International Academic Publishers, Bern

    A tribute to Henry W. Sullivan in celebration of his 80th birthday, this volume encompasses a wide spectrum of Hispanic literary scholarship to honor a prolific scholar whose contributions have been extensive, not only as a Golden Age Hispanist but... more

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    A tribute to Henry W. Sullivan in celebration of his 80th birthday, this volume encompasses a wide spectrum of Hispanic literary scholarship to honor a prolific scholar whose contributions have been extensive, not only as a Golden Age Hispanist but also as a devoted Lacanian scholar, literary critic, translator, poet, novelist, playwright, and composer. The title of the collection comes directly from Sullivan’s recent study on tragic drama in the Golden Age of Spain. Even though the “ghost” he attempts to lay there is the critical controversy around defining and classifying tragedy among Spanish classic comedias, the label extends and applies to Sullivan’s lifelong commitment to the relevance of Spanish drama of the Golden Age within the universal canon, especially from an English-language perspective. Moreover, his arguments are easily applicable in defense of the Humanities and the significance of Literature amid the unwelcome structural changes in Academia.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Lauer, A. Robert (Herausgeber); Galoppe, Raúl A. (Herausgeber)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781636670416
    Other identifier:
    DDC Categories: 860
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    Series: Ibérica ; 50
    Subjects: Spanisch; Literatur; Siglo de oro; A Stubborn Ghost; Essays; Essays in Honor of Henry W. Sullivan; Galoppe; Ghost; Golden Age literature; Henry; Honor; Lauer; Mason; Performance; Raúl; Raúl A. Galoppe; Robert; Spanish classical theatre; Spanish comedia; Stubborn; Sullivan; Theatre research; Tony
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (328 Seiten)
  7. New Beginnings
    Perspectives from France and Ireland
    Contributor: Maher, Eamon (Herausgeber); Mac Con Iomaire, Máirtin (Herausgeber)
    Published: 2023
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Ltd, Oxford ; Peter Lang International Academic Publishers, Bern

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Contributor: Maher, Eamon (Herausgeber); Mac Con Iomaire, Máirtin (Herausgeber)
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781800797949
    Other identifier:
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    Series: Studies in Franco-Irish Relations ; 20
    Subjects: Anthony; cultural theory; Eamon; Eamon Maher; France; Franco-Irish links; Iomaire; Ireland; Literature; Maher; Máirtin; Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire; Mason; New Beginnings; Perspectives; Perspectives from France and Ireland
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource
  8. The Poetry of Sex
    From Sappho to Carol Ann Duffy
    Published: 2023
    Publisher:  Peter Lang Ltd, Oxford ; Peter Lang International Academic Publishers, Bern

    Deals in a comprehensive, but succinct way with poets who wrote of sex and love. It covers Greek and Roman poets, the Troubadours of Provence and also Chaucer and Shakespeare, who wrote briefly about the tyranny of sexual desire. Also, in England,... more

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    Deals in a comprehensive, but succinct way with poets who wrote of sex and love. It covers Greek and Roman poets, the Troubadours of Provence and also Chaucer and Shakespeare, who wrote briefly about the tyranny of sexual desire. Also, in England, Shelley and Byron, who wrote of incest. The book cites a number of Irish Writers from the modern period. These include Eavan Boland, John Montagu and Desmond Egan. The book is a contribution to the history of ideas.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781803741093
    Other identifier:
    DDC Categories: 800
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    Subjects: Literatur; Geschlechterrolle <Motiv>; Liebe <Motiv>; Sexualverhalten <Motiv>; Lyrik; Liebeslyrik; Arkins; Arkins Brian; Arkins, The Poetry of Sex; Brian; Carol; Duffy; From Sappho to Carol Ann Duffy; gay and lesbian poetry; Love poetry; Mason; Poetry; Sappho; The Poetry of Sex; Tony
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (154 Seiten)