LITERATURE AND SEXUALITY
In: The Massachusetts review: MR ; a quarterly of literature, the arts and public affairs, Band 8, Heft 3, S. 442-456
ISSN: 0025-4878
6139023 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: The Massachusetts review: MR ; a quarterly of literature, the arts and public affairs, Band 8, Heft 3, S. 442-456
ISSN: 0025-4878
In: Reading popular fiction
Introduction : reading popular fiction / Derek Longhurst -- West of everything / Jane Tompkins -- The political unconscious in the maternal melodrama : Ellen Wood's East Lynne (1861) / E. Ann Kaplan -- Sherlock Holmes : adventures of an English gentleman 1887-1894 / Derek Longhurst -- The stuff that dreams are made of : masculinity, femininity and the thriller / David Glover -- The masculine fiction of William McIlvanney / Peter Humm and Paul Stigant -- Rewriting the masculine script : the novels of Joseph Hansen / Roger Bromley -- The divided gaze : reflections on the political thriller / Tony Davies -- Gorky Park : American dreams in Siberia / Barry Taylor -- Bodily symbolism and the fiction of Stephen King / Verena Lovett -- Popular writing and feminist intervention in science fiction / Sarah Lefanu -- Science fiction : the dreams of men / Derek Longhurst
In: Cambridge critical concepts
"Decadence and Literature explains how the concept of decadence developed since Roman times into a major cultural trope with broad explanatory power. No longer just a term of opprobrium for mannered art or immoral behaviour, decadence today describes complex cultural and social responses to modernity in all its forms. From the Roman emperor's indulgence in luxurious excess as both personal vice and political control, to the Enlightenment libertine's rational pursuit of hedonism, to the nineteenth-century dandy's simultaneous delight and distaste with modern urban life, decadence has emerged as a way of taking cultural stock of major social changes. These changes include the role of women in forms of artistic expression and social participation formerly reserved for men, as well as the increasing acceptance of LGBTQ+ relationships, a development with a direct relationship to decadence. Today, decadence seems more important than ever to an informed understanding of contemporary anxieties and uncertainties"--
In: Mîzân Band 26
In: Studien zur Literatur in der islamischen Welt
Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Table of Contents; Body; 1. Literature and blogs -- two sides of the same coin; Introduction; Theoretical foundations; Expanding the literary backdrop; The cross-over to blogs; Disposition of study; 2. Stop worrying and start loving shit; Introducing Wael Abbas; Issues that don't get covered in the traditional media; Inspiring activism; Spectacular video clips; The older literary story; The spirit of a rebel revealed; Concluding discussion on al-Waʿy al-Miṣrī; 3. Blogging for the Brethren; Introducing Ana Ikhwan; Facts & bureaucratic details
Imagining a Peaceful Society: A Vision of Children's Literature in a Post-Conflict Zimbabwe addresses the marginalisation of children's literature from the discourse on conflict and peace building in Africa. By presenting a unique perspective to how writers of children's literature, and children themselves understand, grapple with, and envision peace in a post-conflict Zimbabwean society, this Discussion Paper calls attention to the immense, but largely untapped potential of literature as a critical resource for the promotion peace in Africa. ; CONTENTS -- Zimbabwe: An Anatomy of Crisis -- Children's Literature: A Definition -- Naming Conflict: Zimbabwean Children's Literature -- Envisioning a New Society: Zimbabwean Children's Literature
BASE
Latgalian literature has received relatively little attention in most studies of Latvian literature, regardless of the time or the type of the studies made, be they studies of individual or collaborative nature. In the late 19th century and early 20th century, it was largely caused by prohibition of Latgalian publications printed in the Latin alphabet. In the following periods Latgalian literature was overlooked because of lack of awareness, sometimes, also by deliberate ignorance, which was dictated by the political situation. Exploration of the current situation is the goal of this study, namely, to present a summary of what has already been accomplished and to indicate the directions where new studies are urgently needed, ideally – through joint examination of Latvian and Latgalian literatures. The summary is based on the analysis of the regularities and main issues found in the works on the history of Latgalian literature. Careful analysis of the literary processes, authors and significant literary works of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, as well as their exposure in the studies of the history of Latvian literature reveals that a short insight in publishing of Latgalian books and periodicals was given, for instance, by Teodors Zeiferts in his fundamental study 'History of Latvian Literature, Part 2 and 3' (Latviešu rakstniecības vēsture, 1923, 1925), and Jānis Niedre in 'Latvian Literature. Part 2' (Latviešu literatūra, 1953); small essays were also included in the volumes of the collaborative study developed under Ludis Bērziņš' chief editing 'History of Latvian Literature' (Latviešu literatūras vēsture, 1935–1937). However, Latgalian literature was hardly mentioned in the textbooks for the secondary schools (Vilis Plūdons 'History of Latvian literature for secondary schools, Part 1 and 2' (Latvju literatūras vēsture vidusskolām, 1927, 1928); Roberts Klaustiņš 'History of Latvian Literature' (Latviešu rakstniecības vēsture, 1907)). Neither was it paid any attention by Andrejs Upīts in his 'History of Contemporary Latvian Literature' (Latviešu jaunākās rakstniecības vēsture, 1885–1910 (1911)). This leads to a conclusion that the attitude towards the literature written in Latgalian was ambiguous in the first half of the 20th century as it was not fully incorporated in the conceptual analysis of the development processes of Latvian literature. The voluminous 'History of Latvian Literature' (Latviešu literatūras vēsture, Volume 1–6, 1956–1963), which was developed during the Soviet period, included depiction of several Latgalian writers: such as Andrivs Jūrdžs and Pīters Miglinīks (Volume 2, 1963); nevertheless they did not provide a sufficient overview of the singularity and development of Latgalian literature and its comparability with the history of Latvian literature. In the editions of the history of Latvian literature, which were written after regain of the national independence, Latgalian literature has not received any focused attention either by the authors of the 3-volume 'History of Latvian Literature' (Latviešu literatūras vēsture, 1998–2001) or by, for instance, Guntis Berelis in his monograph study 'History of Latvian Literature, from the First Writings to 1999'. Having gained no wide coverage in the historical studies of Latvian literature, Latgalian literature has been fundamentally researched in several monographic works of Miķelis Bukšs, Francis Kemps, Janīna Kursīte, Valentīns Lukaševičs, Ilona Salceviča, Alberts Sprūdžs, Anna Stafecka, Vitolds Valeinis and other researchers at various time periods. Nonetheless, the question still stands: whether and how to compare and synchronise Latgalian literature with periodisation and trends of Latvian literature in order to include it in the comprehensive overview of the literature history.
BASE
In: Manuals 197
In: Humanitats
In: Kierkegaard research Vol. 6, T. 3
In: Kierkegaard and his German contemporaries T. 3