|
Alliterative Revivals (The Middle Ages Series) Boo |
|
Alliterative Revivals (The Middle Ages Series) Boo
Visits: 34233
Rating:
(1.0)
Rated By: 1043 Users
Added On: 30-Oct-2010
Download Alliterative Revivals (The Middle Ages Series) Boo
Category: Feminism
|
|
EBook Description: Alliterative Revivals is the first full-length study of the sophisticated historical consciousness of late medieval alliterative romance. Drawing from historicism, feminism, performance studies, and postcolonial theory, Christine Chism argues that these poems animate British history by reviving and acknowledging potentially threatening figures from the medieval past--pagan judges, primeval giants, Greek knights, Jewish forefathers, Egyptian sorcerers, and dead ancestors. In addressing the ways alliterative poems centralize history--the dangerous but profitable commerce of the present with the past--Chism's book shifts the emphasis from the philological questions that have preoccupied studies of alliterative romance and offers a new argument about the uses of alliterative poetry, how it appealed to its original producers and audiences, and why it deserves attention now.
Alliterative Revivals examines eight poems: St. Erkenwald, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, The Wars of Alexander, The Siege of Jerusalem, the alliterative Morte Arthure, De Tribus Regibus Mortuis, The Awntyrs off Arthure, and Somer Sunday.
|
Similar eBooks: eBooks related to Alliterative Revivals (The Middle Ages Series) Boo |
William Shakespeare, Othello (The New Cambridge Shakespeare, Updated Edition) Book
Professor Sanders provides a full analysis of the textual problem and theories of transmission of Othello, and offers possible solutions to the stylistic and racial problems which face modern readers and spectators. His edition includes contemporary maps of Venice and Cyprus, photographs of famous actors who have played the leading roles, and reconstructions of staging at the Globe and Blackfriars Theatres.
Thomas Sowell, Economic Facts and Fallacies Book
From one of America's most distinguished economists, a short, brilliant and revelatory book: the fundamental ideas people most commonly get wrong about economics, and how to think about the subject better.
R. C. Terry, Oxford Reader's Companion to Trollope Book
The author of forty-seven novels, plus travel books, biographies, essays, and critical works, Anthony Trollope (1815-1882) was the most prolific of the great Victorian writers. Now The Oxford Reader's Companion to Trollope brings together thirty-six leading scholars who provide an accessible, authoritative, and wide-ranging reference work on this important literary figure.
Mеlissа Hоре Ditmоre: Encyclоpedia оf Prоstitution and Sеx Wоrk Book
The cliche is that prostitution is the oldest profession. Isn't it time that the subject received a full reference treatment? This major 2-volume set is the first to treat in an inclusive reference what is usually considered a societal failing and the underside of sexuality and economic survival. The A-to-Z encyclopedia offers wide-ranging entries related to prostitution and the sex industry, past and present, both worldwide (mostly in the West) and in the United States. The topic of prostitution has high-interest appeal across disciplines, and the narrative entries illuminate literature, art, law, medicine, economics, politics, women's studies, religion, sociology, sexuality, film, popular culture, public health, nonfiction, American and world history.
Jack Zipes, The Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales Book
From its ancient roots in the oral tradition to the postmodernist reworkings of the present day, the fairy tale has retained its powerful hold over the cultural imagination of Europe and North America. Now The Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales provides the first authoritative reference source for this complex, captivating genre.
Susan Faludi The Terror Dream Fear and Fantasy in Post 9 1
From the Pulitzer Prize�winning journalist and bestselling author of Backlash�an unflinching dissection of the mind of America after 9/11. In this most original examination of America�s post-9/11 culture, Susan Faludi shines a light on the country�s psychological response to the attacks on that terrible day. Turning her acute observational powers on the media, popular culture, and political life, Faludi unearths a barely acknowledged but bedrock societal drama shot through with baffling contradictions. Why, she asks, did our culture respond to an assault against American global dominance with a frenzied summons to restore �traditional� manhood, marriage, and maternity? Why did we react as if the hijackers had targeted not a commercial and military edifice but the family home and nursery? Why did an attack fueled by hatred of Western emancipation lead us to a regressive fixation on Doris Day womanhood and John Wayne masculinity, with trembling �security moms,� swaggering presidential gunslingers, and the �rescue� of a female soldier cast as a �helpless little girl�? The answer, Faludi finds, lies in a historical anomaly unique to the American experience: the nation that in recent memory has been least vulnerable to domestic attack was forged in traumatizing assaults by nonwhite �barbarians� on town and village. That humiliation lies concealed under a myth of cowboy bluster and feminine frailty, which is reanimated whenever threat and shame looms.
Alliterative Revivals (The Middle Ages Series) Boo - Free eBook Alliterative Revivals (The Middle Ages Series) Boo - Download ebook Alliterative Revivals (The Middle Ages Series) Boo free
|
|
|