Wordsworth.--Aphorisms.--Maine on popular government.--A few words on French models.--On the study of literature.--Victor Hugos̓ Ninety-three.--In The ring and the book.--Memorials of a man of letters [Macvey Napier]--Valedictory. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; 14
"First edition, 1890 . reprinted 1904." ; Reprinted from the Nineteenth century and the Fortnightly review. ; Wordsworth.--Aphorisms.--Maine on popular government.--A few words on French models.--On the study of literature.--Victor Hugos̓ Ninety-three.--On The ring and the book.--Memorials of a man of letters [Macvey Napier]--Valedictory. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Reprinted from the Nineteenth century and the Fortnightly review. ; Wordsworth.-- Aphorisms.-- Maine on popular government.-- A few words on French models.-- On the study of literature.-- Victor Hugo's Ninety-three.-- On The ring and the book.-- Memorials of a man of letters [Macvey Napier]-- Valedictory. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Reprinted from the Nineteenth century and the Fortnightly review. ; Wordsworth.--Aphorisms.--Maine on popular government.--A few words on French models.--On the study of literature.--Victor Hugo's Ninety-three.--On The ring and the book.--Memorials of a man of letters [Macvey Napier]--Valedictory. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Reprinted from the Nineteenth century and the Fortnightly review. ; Wordsworth.--Aphorisms.--Maine on popular government.--A few words on French models.--On the study of literature.--Victor Hugo's Ninety-three.--On the ring and the book.--Memorials of a man of letters [Macvey Napier]--Valedictory. ; Mode of access: Internet.
The aim of this collection is to contribute to the forging of a more robust, politically useful, and theoretically elaborate understanding of working-class literature(s). These essays map a substantial terrain: the history of working-class literature(s) in Argentina, Denmark, Germany, Japan, Singapore, South Africa and Ireland. Together with the essays in a previous volume – which cover Russia/The Soviet Union, The USA, Finland, Sweden, The UK, and Mexico – they give a complex picture of working-class literature(s) from an international perspective, without losing sight of national specificities. By capturing a wide range of definitions and literatures, the two volumes give a broad and rich picture of the many-facetted phenomenon of working-class literature(s), disrupt narrow understandings of the concept and phenomenon, as well as identify and discuss some of the most important theoretical and historical questions brought to the fore by the study of this literature.If read as stand-alone chapters, each contribution gives an overview of the history and research of a particular nation's working-class literature. If read as a whole (which we hope you do), they contribute toward a more complex understanding of the global phenomenon of working-class literature(s).
The French revolution and literature.--The transcendental movement and literature.--The scientific movement and literature.--The prose works of Wordsworth.--Walter Savage Landor.--Mr. Tennyson and Mr. Browning.--George Eliot.--George Eliot: II. "Middlemarch" and "Daniel Deronda"--Lamennais.--Edgar Quinet.--On some French writers of verse, 1830-1877.--The poetry of Victor Hugo.--The poetry of democracy: Walt Whitman. ; Mode of access: Internet.
The French revolution and literature.--The transcendental movement and literature.--The scientific movement and literature.--The prose works of Wordsworth.--Walter Savage Landor.--Mr. Tennyson and Mr. Browning.--George Eliot.--George Eliot, II.--"Middlemarch" and "Daniel Deronda".--Lamennais.--Edgar Quinet.--On some French writers of verse, 1830-1877.--The poetry of Victor Hugo.--The poetry of democracy: Walt Whitman. ; Mode of access: Internet.
The French revolution and literature.--The transcendental movement and literature.--The scientific movement and literature.--The prose works of Wordsworth.--Walter Savage Landor.--Mr. Tennyson and Mr. Browning.--George Eliot.--Lamennais.--Edgar Quinet.--On some French writers of verse, 1830-1877.--The poetry of Victor Hugo.--The poetry of democracy: Walt Whitman. ; Mode of access: Internet.
The French revolution and literature -- The transcendental movement and literature -- The scientific movement and literature -- The prose works of Wordsworth -- Walter Savage Landor -- Mr. Tennyson and Mr. Browning --George Eliot -- George Eliot: II. "Middlemarch" and "Daniel Deronda" --Lamennais -- Edgar Quinet -- On some French writers of verse, 1830-1877 -- The poetry of Victor Hugo -- The poetry of democracy: Walt Whitman. ; Mode of access: Internet.
The French revolution and literature.--The transcendental movement and literature.--The scientific movement and literature.--The prose works of Wordsworth.--Walter Savage Landor.--Mr. Tennyson and Mr. Browning.--George EliotLamennais. Edgar Quinet.--On some French writers of verse, 1830-1877.--The poetry of Victor Hugo.--The poetry of democracy: Walt Whitman. ; Mode of access: Internet.
The man of letters as a man of business.--Worries of a winter walk.--Confessions of a summer colonist.--The editor's relations with the young contributor.--Summer isles of Eden.--Wild flowers of the asphalt.--Last days in a Dutch hotel.--Some anomalies of the short story.--A circus in the suburbs.--A she Hamlet.--Spanish prisoners of war.--The midnight platoon.--The beach at Rockaway.--American literary centres.--Sawdust in the arena.--At a dime museum.--American literature in exile.--The horse show.--The problem of the summer.--AEsthetic New York fifty-odd years ago.--From New York into New England.--The standard household-effect company.--Staccato notes of a vanished summer.--The art of the adsmith.--The psychology of plagiarism.--Puritanism in American fiction.--The what and the how of it.--Politics of American authors.--Storage.--"Floating down the river on the O-hi-o." ; Mode of access: Internet.
Shining a light on responsive and responsible reading practices, postcolonial forms of magic realism, democratic epistemology, demonized others, the others of the others, critical insiders and subaltern voices, metonymic cross-writing and cultural criss-crossings, papers in this anthology engage with issues of empowerment and disempowerment, tensions between modernity and tradition and ideas of development and progress as connected to understandings of race, gender, caste, subalternity, and religion.
Abstract: The bank as a financial institution that serves as a intermediary in its operational activitiesis not separated from the risks faced, the higher the risk, the more possible the profitability of abank. Sharia banks must have a range of preparation and strategy in risk management, starting fromthe goal setting phase and risk management strategy, identification, measurement and mitigationrisks, supervision, and the implementation of the risk management. According to PBI regulation No.13/25/PBI/2011 On the implementation of risk management for sharia banks and sharia businessunits, the risk is as potential as potential loss due to a particular perinstiwa. Legal risk is a risk arisingfrom lawsuits and the weakness of the juridical aspect is caused by the weakness of the Bank'salliance and the absence or change of regulation of banking invitation legislation. The Bank mustidentify and control the legal risks found in each of its functional activities.Keywords: Risk Management, Literature Study
The conference 'Is Economic Inequality also a Literary Problem?' held at Uppsala University, Sweden, in 2017 raised the following questions: What does literature have to do with inequality? Does it contribute to its reproduction, or can it be a force of resistance? Is it fair to even ask of literature and literary studies that they address the problem of economic inequality? This essay claims the answers to these questions are conditioned by the historical contexts of the critics grappling with them and the literatures that they study. Employing an analysis of the theme of poverty in contemporary Swedish-language working-class literature, I argue that the consecration of this literature as an important strand in Swedish national literature has allowed it to express radical critique of the economic inequalities lying at the heart of capitalism. Furthermore, I argue that this insight could be used as a starting-point for challenging some of the more pessimistic views expressed by critics of working-class literature regarding its political potentials.