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  • - Decorating Museums in the Nineteenth Century
    av Jeffrey Chipps (Kay Fortson Chair in European Art Smith
    1 229

    Explores the complex posthumous reception of Albrecht Durer (1471-1528) as the embodiment of Germany's past artistic greatness and its current cultural aspirations and as a creative and moral examplar for contemporary artists and museum visitors.

  • - Images of Martyrdom in Late Medieval Germany
    av Assaf (Tel Aviv University) Pinkus
    1 229

    Explores images of torment and martyrdom that appeared in the German-speaking world in the late medieval period, tying them to premodern conceptualizations of individuality and selfhood.

  •  
    1 779

    A collection of essays that encompass the two principal approaches to the history of ancient Near Eastern studies: descriptive historiography and intellectual history

  • av Bob (Professor Emeritus Becking
    433,99 - 1 099

  • - Making Sense of What We See
    av University of Rochester) Saab & A. Joan (Susan B. Anthony Professor
    379 - 955,-

    Examines a series of linked case studies that not only highlight moments of seeming disconnect between seeing and believing, including hoaxes, miracles, spirit paintings, manipulated photographs, and holograms, but also offer a sensory history of ways of seeing.

  • av Karalyn (Associate Professor Kendall-Morwick
    449 - 1 185,-

  • av Austin McQuinn
    475 - 1 185,-

  • av Stefan Lorenz (John Cabot University) Sorgner
    389 - 1 069,-

    Examines widespread myths about transhumanism and explores the most pressing ethical issues in the debate over technologically assisted human enhancement.

  • - Ford's Filmmaking and the Rise of Corporatism
    av Timothy (Assistant Professor of English & University of Louisville) Johnson
    475 - 1 245,-

    Examines motion pictures produced or sponsored by Ford Motor Company from a rhetorical perspective, demonstrating how the films reveal a long-term rhetorical project that has helped embed corporations into many of the social systems guiding societies today.

  • - Public Rhetoric and the Making of the "Illegal" Immigrant
    av Lisa A. (University of Colorado ) Flores
    395 - 1 175

    Studies popular tropes in the United States for Mexican immigrants, tracing the history and usage of terms that were shaped by race, class, and national borders.

  • - Fantastic Creatures of Indigenous Latin America
    av Ilan (Amherst College) Stavans
    279

    Explores forty-six religious, mythical, and imaginary creatures that are integral to the aboriginal worldview of Aymara, Aztecs, Incas, Maya, Nahua, Tabascos, and other cultures of Latin America.

  • av Chair of Jewish Studies Halevi-Wise & Yael (Associate Professor
    475 - 1 299

  • av Laura (Professor of Religion Levitt
    369,-

    A personal memoir and examination of the ways in which the material remains of violent crimes, from rape to genocide, inform our experience of, and thinking about, trauma and loss.

  • - Reading the Erotic Body
    av Maggie M. Werner
    449 - 1 299

  • - Reading and the Moral Imagination in Comics and Graphic Novels
    av Ken (Professor of Religion Koltun-Fromm
    505,-

    Develops a critical reading of comic religious narratives to engage moral sources that both expand and limit our ethical worlds.

  • - Reading Environmental Entanglements in Modern Italy
    av Enrico (Associate Professor of Italian Studies Cesaretti
    1 305,-

    Using an ecomaterialist conceptual framework, addresses interconnected stories from fiction, nonfiction, works of visual art, and physical sites in Italy and elsewhere.

  • - Appropriating Milton in Early African American Literature
    av Reginald A. Wilburn
    545

    In this comparative and hybrid study, Reginald A. Wilburn offers the first scholarly work to theorize African American authors'' rebellious appropriations of Milton and his canon. Wilburn engages African Americans'' transatlantic negotiations with perhaps the preeminent freedom writer in the English tradition.Preaching the Gospel of Black Revolt contends that early African American authors appropriated and remastered Milton by completing and complicating England''s epic poet of liberty with the intertextual originality of repetitive difference. Wilburn focuses on a diverse array of early African American authors, such as Phillis Wheatley, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Frederick Douglass, and Anna Julia Cooper. He examines the presence of Milton in their works as a reflection of early African Americans'' rhetorical affiliations with the poet''s satanic epic for messianic purposes of freedom and racial uplift.Wilburn explains that early African American authors were attracted to Milton because of his preeminent status in literary tradition, strong Christian convictions, and poetic mastery of the English language. This tripartite ministry makes Milton an especially indispensible intertext for authors whose writings and oratory were sometimes presumed beneath the dignity of criticism. Through close readings of canonical and obscure texts, Wilburn explores how various authors rebelled against such assessments of black intellect by altering Milton''s meanings, themes, and figures beyond orthodox interpretations and imbuing them with hermeneutic shades of interpretive and cultural difference. However they remastered Milton, these artists respected his oeuvre as a sacred yet secular talking book of revolt, freedom, and cultural liberation.Preaching the Gospel of Black Revolt particularly draws upon recent satanic criticism in Milton studies, placing it in dialogue with methodologies germane to African American literary studies. By exposing the subversive workings of an intertextual Middle Passage in black literacy, Wilburn invites scholars from diverse areas of specialization to traverse within and beyond the cultural veils of racial interpretation and along the color line in literary studies.

  • - The Competing Obligations of Citizenship
    av William Keith & Robert Danisch
    345 - 1 299

  • - Essential Elizabethan Sources, 1558-1603
    av Rebecca Totaro
    499,-

    In The Plague in Print, Rebecca Totaro takes the reader into the world of plague-riddled Elizabethan England, documenting the development of distinct subgenres related to the plague and providing unprecedented access to important original sources of early modern plague writing. Totaro elucidates the interdisciplinary nature of plague writing, which raises religious, medical, civic, social, and individual concerns in early modern England. Each of the primary texts in the collection offers a glimpse into a particular subgenre of plague writing, beginning with Thomas Moulton''s plague remedy and prayers published by the Church of England and devoted to the issue of the plague. William Bullein''s A Dialogue, both pleasant and pietyful, a work that both addresses concerns related to the plague and offers humorous literary entertainment, exemplifies the multilayered nature of plague literature. The plague orders of Queen Elizabeth I highlight the community-wide attempts to combat the plague and deal with its manifold dilemmas. And after a plague bill from the Corporation of London, the collection ends with Thomas Dekker''s The Wonderful Year, which illustrates plague literature as it was fully formed, combining attitudes toward the plague from both the Elizabethan and Stuart periods.These writings offer a vivid picture of important themes particular to plague literature in England, providing valuable insight into the beliefs and fears of those who suffered through bubonic plague while illuminating the cultural significance of references to the plague in the more familiar early modern literature by Spenser, Donne, Milton, Shakespeare, and others. As a result, The Plague in Print will be of interest to students and scholars in a number of fields, including sixteenth- and seventeenth-century English literature, cultural studies, medical humanities, and the history of medicine.

  • - George Washington and the Invention of the Republic
    av Stephen Howard (The Pennsylvania State University) Browne
    395,-

    Examines the first American presidential inauguration, including the people, ceremonies, and issues surrounding the event, and argues that George Washington's inaugural address provides a compelling statement of the values necessary to make the experiment in republican government a success.

  • av Robert de Reims
    369,-

  • av Scott (Associate Professor Oldenburg
    395 - 1 295

  • - The Jawad Adra Cuneiform Collection in the Nabu Museum, El Heri, Lebanon
    av David I. (Bernard and Jane Schapiro Professor of Ancient Near Eastern and Jadaic Studies Owen
    1 159

    This volume presents critical editions of tablets from the Early Dynastic, Sargonic, Ur III, Old Babylonian, and Middle Babylonian periods, housed in the Jawad Adra Cuneiform Collection in the Nabu Museum in El Heri, Lebanon. Bringing together a wide range of administrative, literary, historical, and lexical texts, From Mesopotamia to Lebanon is a valuable survey of representative documents from the third and second millennia BCE in Mesopotamia. Culled from the most significant collection of cuneiform tablets in Lebanon, the documents published here mainly derive from southern Iraq. Despite a wide chronological span, internal evidence indicates that they likely originate from various sites in two main areas: the first close to the ancient bank of the Tigris River, in the ancient cities of Adab, IrisaÄ?rig, and Umma and their environs; the second along the bank of the Euphrates River, in and around the cities of Isin and Shuruppak. The presence of school and literary tablets within the archival group suggests that one or more of these sites contained a scribal school. Taken together, the texts of the Adra Collection cover one and a half millennia (2600‿1100 BCE), from the early period of the Sumerian city-states to the time when the region was ruled successively by the kings of Akkad, followed by the kingdoms of Ur, Isin, Larsa, and, finally, Babylon. The two editors and six contributors represent an international group of scholars who provide critical editions of texts in their respective areas of expertise. In addition to the editors, the contributors to this volume are Alhena Gadotti, Alexandra Kleinerman, Camille Lecompte, Nordine Ouraghi, Jacques Quillien, and Wilfred van Soldt.

  • - Literary and Scholarly Texts from the Old Babylonian Period
    av Jacob (Bar-Ilan University) Klein
    1 365

    English translations covering a variety of cuneiform tablets from the Old Babylonian period, belonging to the collection of the late Shlomo Moussaieff.

  • - Mobile, Contingent, and Ephemeral Networks, 1960-1980
     
    625

    Examines the rich networks of international artists and art practices that emerged in and around London during the 1960s and 1970s. Discusses diverse practices, movements, and spaces, from painting, sculpture, and film to performance, conceptual, and land art.

  • av AURELIEN DUCOUDRAY & Jeff Pourquie
    319

  • - John Sloan and the Art of a New Urban Space
    av Adam Thomas
    345,-

    The celebrated Ashcan School artist John Sloan produced a distinctive body of work depicting life on the rooftops of early twentieth-century New York City. Designed to accompany the major loan exhibition of the same name organized by the Palmer Museum of Art, From the Rooftops: John Sloan and the Art of a New Urban Space examines the allure of rooftop locales for Sloan, as well as for more than a dozen of his contemporaries.From his early career as an illustrator in Philadelphia to the final years of his life, Sloan nurtured a fascination with what he called the "roof life of the metropolis." Devoted to the importance of this setting in Sloan's oeuvre, From the Rooftops features paintings, prints, and photographs by Sloan, alongside examples from other notable artists of the time, such as George Ault, William Glackens, Hughie Lee-Smith, Edward Hopper, and Reginald Marsh--artists who were likewise enthralled by "the city above the city." In this book, art historian Adam Thomas explores the pivotal role that New York's City's rooftops played in Sloan's thinking about urban space and places Sloan's work within its broader artistic and cultural context. In his analysis, Thomas considers the liminal status of the rooftop and its complexities as both an extension of the domestic sphere and an escape from it during a period of profound social and architectural transformation in New York City. Featuring insightful analysis and more than eighty full-color illustrations, this catalog will appeal to art historians and art enthusiasts alike.

  • - Djuna Barnes's Modernism
     
    505,-

    A collection of essays on the work of Djuna Barnes, including her early journalism, poetry, prose, visual art, and drama.

  • - Gender, Crime, and Punishment in Antebellum Pennsylvania
    av Erica Rhodes Hayden
    499,-

    Examines the lived experiences of women criminals in Pennsylvania from 1820 to 1860, mainly as they navigated the nineteenth-century legal and prison systems.

  • - YHWH's Ancient Look-Alikes
     
    1 295

    A collection of essays by scholars of the Hebrew Bible providing recommendations for how Jews and Christians can think theologically about the challenge of similarities between YHWH and other ancient gods.

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