Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker utgitt av Ohio State University Press

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  • - The Coming of Age of the Woman Poet and the Politics of Poetic Address
    av Jane Hedley
    468,-

  • - Boris Pasternak's Early Prose
    av Elena Glazov-Corrigan
    502,-

  • - The Southern Ritual Grounds of Afro-Modernism
    av Jurgen E Grandt
    468,-

  • - The Idea of the Literary in Medieval England
     
    553,-

  • - Dueling, Honor, and Masculinity in Modern Italy
    av Steven C Hughes
    604,-

  • - Readings in Propertius and His Genre
    av W R Johnson
    384,-

    Over the centuries, Latin love elegy has inspired love poetry in the West from Petrarch to Pound. A Latin Lover in Ancient Rome: Readings in Propertius and His Genre offers a critical reevaluation of the Latin elegiac poet Propertius, situating him within the social and political milieu of first-century BCE Rome. W. R. Johnson's study is centered on close readings of the poems in Propertius' four books that emphasize both his celebration of erotic freedom as a manifestation of the sovereignty of the individual and his insistence on the value of this freedom, especially when it is threatened by autocratic ideology. Many recent titles on Propertius have tended to minimize or ignore this aspect of the poet's work, concentrating instead on neo-formalism or Lacanian psychology. Johnson restores Propertius' erotic creed and his politics to the core of his poetics and his career. He offers a vivid picture of the sociopolitical and erotic world of the late Roman Republic and the early years of the Empire which hatched Latin love elegy and allowed it to flourish. This study aims to redirect attention to the pleasures and energies Propertius provides that later generations of poets and readers discovered in and through him.

  • - Domestic Fraud in Victorian England
    av Rebecca Stern
    468,-

  • - Tactile Experience in Domestic Space
    av James Krasner
    468,-

  • - An Asian Americanist Critique of U.S. and Chinese Multiculturalisms
    av Wen Jin
    468,-

  • - The Organization of Knowledge and Community in Europe
     
    553,-

    The fourteen essays that comprise Collections in Context: The Organization of Knowledge and Community in Europe interrogate questions posed by French, Flemish, English, and Italian collections of all sorts-libraries as a whole, anthologies and miscellanies assembled within a single manuscript or printed book, and even illustrated ivory boxes.Collecting became an increasingly important activity during the fourteenth through seventeenth centuries, when the decreased cost of producing books made ownership available to more people. But the act of collecting is never neutral: it gathers information, orders material (especially linear texts), and prioritizes everything-in short, collecting both organizes and comments on knowledge. Moreover, the context of a collection must reveal something about identity, but whose? That of the compiler? The reader or viewer? The donor? The patron? With essays by a wide array of international scholars, Collections in Context demonstrates that the very act of collecting inevitably imposes some kind of relationship among what might otherwise be naively thought of as disparate elements and simultaneously exposes something about the community that created and used the collection. Thus, Collections in Context offers unusual insights into how collecting both produced knowledge and built community in early modern Europe.

  • - Expansionist Imperatives in Post-Reconstruction American Novels
    av John Moran Gonzalez
    384,-

  • - Reading Across the Fifteenth Century
     
    468,-

  • - Popular Front Ideals and Aesthetics in Children's Plays of the Federal Theatre Project
    av Leslie Elaine Frost
    468,-

  • av Mario Erasmo
    553,-

  • - The Presence of the East in Early American Literature
    av Jim Egan
    468,-

  • - Marriage and the African Woman in Eighteenth-Century British Literature, 1759-1808
    av Lyndon J Dominique
    553,-

  • - Homicide, Gender, and National Identity in Late Nineteenth-Century England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales
    av Carolyn Conley
    553,-

    Even though England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales were under a common Parliament in the nineteenth century, cultural, economic, and historical differences led to very different values and assumptions about crime and punishment. For example, though the Scots were the most likely to convict accused killers, English, Welsh, and Irish killers were two and a half times more likely to be executed for their crimes. In Certain Other Countries, Carolyn A. Conley explores how the concepts of national identity and criminal violence influenced each other in the Victorian-era United Kingdom. It also addresses the differences among the nations as well as the ways that homicide trials illuminate the issues of gender, ethnicity, family, privacy, property, and class. Homicides reflect assumptions about the proper balance of power in various relationships. For example, Englishmen were ten times more likely to kill women they were courting than were men in the Celtic nations. By combining quantitative techniques in the analysis of over seven thousand cases, as well as careful and detailed readings of individual cases, the book exposes trends and patterns that might not have been evident in works using only one method. For instance, by examining all homicide trials rather than concentrating exclusively on a few highly celebrated ones, it becomes clear that most female killers were not viewed with particular horror, but were treated much like their male counterparts.The conclusions offer challenges and correctives to existing scholarship on gender, ethnicity, class, and violence. The book also demonstrates that the Welsh, Scots, and English remained quite distinct long after their melding as Britons was announced and celebrated. By blending a study of trends in violent behavior with ideas about national identity, Conley brings together rich and hotly debated fields of modern history. This book will be valuable both for scholars of crime and violence as well as for those studying British history.

  • - An Erotics of Contemporary American Fiction
    av Flore Chevaillier
    384,-

  • - Monsieur de l'Aubepine and His Second Empire Critics
    av Michael Anesko
    553,-

  •  
    1 619,-

    Finalist, 2021 Locus AwardIn Literary Afrofuturism in the Twenty-First Century, eminent contributors pay tribute to Afrofuturism as a powerful and evolving aesthetic practice that communicates the experience of science, technology, and race across centuries, continents, and cultures. While Ryan Coogler and Janelle Monáe may have helped bring the genre into contemporary pop consciousness, it in fact extends back to the writing of eighteenth-century poet Phyllis Wheatley and has continued in the work of Samuel R. Delany, Octavia E. Butler, N. K. Jemisin, and many others. In examining this heritage, contributors in this volume question generic boundaries, recover lost artists and introduce new ones, and explore how the meteoric rise of a new, pan-African speculative literary tradition may or may not connect with Afrofuturism. Additionally, the editors have marshaled some of today's most exciting writers for a roundtable discussion of the genre: Bill Campbell, Minister Faust, Nalo Hopkinson, N. K. Jemisin, Chinelo Onwualu, Nisi Shawl, and Nick Wood. Pioneering author and editor Sheree R. Thomas limns how black women have led new developments in contemporary Afrofuturism, and artist Stacey Robinson's illustrations orient readers to the spirited themes of this enduring and consequential literary tradition.

  •  
    604,-

    Finalist, 2021 Locus AwardIn Literary Afrofuturism in the Twenty-First Century, eminent contributors pay tribute to Afrofuturism as a powerful and evolving aesthetic practice that communicates the experience of science, technology, and race across centuries, continents, and cultures. While Ryan Coogler and Janelle Monáe may have helped bring the genre into contemporary pop consciousness, it in fact extends back to the writing of eighteenth-century poet Phyllis Wheatley and has continued in the work of Samuel R. Delany, Octavia E. Butler, N. K. Jemisin, and many others. In examining this heritage, contributors in this volume question generic boundaries, recover lost artists and introduce new ones, and explore how the meteoric rise of a new, pan-African speculative literary tradition may or may not connect with Afrofuturism. Additionally, the editors have marshaled some of today's most exciting writers for a roundtable discussion of the genre: Bill Campbell, Minister Faust, Nalo Hopkinson, N. K. Jemisin, Chinelo Onwualu, Nisi Shawl, and Nick Wood. Pioneering author and editor Sheree R. Thomas limns how black women have led new developments in contemporary Afrofuturism, and artist Stacey Robinson's illustrations orient readers to the spirited themes of this enduring and consequential literary tradition.

  • - Postmodern Discontent
    av Jordan Carson
    1 535,-

  • - Alliterative Verse and Nationalist Literary History
    av Randy P Schiff
    553,-

  • - The Crisis of Globalization and the Remobilizing of Americanism
    av Sarika Chandra
    553,-

  • - Narrating Subjects from Moll Flanders to Marnie
    av George Butte
    553,-

  • - African Americans Enter the Urban Midwest, 1860-1930
    av Jack S Blocker
    536,-

  • - Communication, Images, and Identity in the Classical World
    av Maurizio Bettini
    553,-

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