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  • av Tilar J. Mazzeo
    919

    Were the Romantic poets plagiarists, and did plagiarism have the same meaning two hundred years ago as it has today? Tilar J. Mazzeo offers a major reassessment of the role of borrowing, textual appropriation, and narrative mastery in British Romantic literature and provides a new picture of the period and its central aesthetic contests.

  • av Daniel Cottom
    629

    Through a wide-ranging study of literature, art, and philosophy, Daniel Cottom explains why ours is an unhuman culture and how this culture still gives us reason for hope.

  • av Shannon McSheffrey
    789

    Using extensive evidence from archival documents from both the ecclesiastical court system and the records of city and royal government, as well as advice manuals, chronicles, moral tales, and liturgical texts, McSheffrey examines how marital and sexual relationships were woven into the fabric of late medieval London.

  • - Rabbi Ishmael and the Origins of Midrash
    av Azzan Yadin
    889,-

    Presents a study of midrash - the biblical exegesis, parables, and anecdotes of the Rabbis. This work examines early, tannaitic legal midrash, focusing on the interpretive tradition associated with the figure of Rabbi Ishmael. It also locates the Rabbi Ishmael hermeneutic within the religious landscape of Second Temple and post-Temple literature.

  • - The Migration Age and the Later Roman Empire
    av Walter Goffart
    419

    Barbarian Tides radically subverts the grand narrative of a "Germanic" migration and reinvents the role of barbarians in the Later Roman Empire. Goffart sets out how the fragmented foreign peoples once living on the edges of the Empire participated with the Romans in the larger stirrings of late antiquity.

  • av Israel Bartal
    359

    "A remarkable achievement. Bartal presents the broad contours of nineteenth-century East European Jewish history even as he reworks them into a nontraditional narrative."-David Engel, New York University

  • av Erving Goffman
    345,-

    The two essays in this classic work by sociologist Erving Goffman explore the calculative, gamelike aspects of human interaction.

  • - From "Alcazar" to "Othello"
    av Emily C. Bartels
    335

    Speaking of the Moor explores why the Moor became a central character on the English stage at the turn of the sixteenth century. Looking closely at key early modern dramatic and historical texts, the book uncovers the Moor's complex identity as a Mediterranean figure poised provocatively between European and non-European worlds.

  • - Scholastic Literary Attitudes in the Later Middle Ages
    av Alastair Minnis
    455

    Available again with a new preface, this classic work of medieval literary scholarship argues that discussion of late-medieval literary works has tended to derive its critical vocabulary from modern, not medieval, theory, and offers instead a conceptual equipment which is at once historically valid and theoretically illuminating.

  • av Rene Lemarchand
    419

    This collection of essays explores the contemporary crises in Rwanda, Burundi, and the Congo-Kinshasa, offering important new insights into the cycle of genocidal violence, ethnic strife, and civil war that has made the Great Lakes region of Central Africa the most violent on the continent.

  • - Rediscovering the Center
    av William H. Whyte
    519

    In a challenging and provocative book, William Whyte, author of the classic The Organization Man, observes the influence public spaces have on the people who use them. In this exploration of pedestrian behavior and urban dynamics, he calls on city planners to provide functional, pleasant places to live and work.

  • - Gender and Politics in Sri Lanka
    av Sandya Hewamanne
    389

    By analyzing how Sri Lankan free trade zone factory workers claim political subjectivity and revealing a vibrant subaltern political universe where they can express alternative perspectives, Stitching Identities in a Free Trade Zone challenges conventional notions about marginalized women at the bottom of the global economy.

  • - The Poetics and Anthropology of Oral Literature
    av John D. Niles
    335

    Homo Narrans explores how human beings shape their world through the stories they tell. Author John D. Niles ponders the nature of the storytelling impulse, the social function of narrative, and the role of individual talent in oral tradition.

  • - The Civil Rights and Antiwar Movements in the 1960s
    av Simon Hall
    335

    An in-depth account of the relationship between the civil rights and antiwar movements of the 1960s.

  • - Theology and Practice in Late Medieval Northern Germany and Beyond
    av Caroline Walker Bynum
    429

    Bynum argues that Christ's blood as both object and symbol was central to late medieval art, literature, and religious life. As cult object, blood provided a focus of theological debate about the nature of matter, body, and God and an occasion for Jewish persecution; as motif, blood became a central symbol in popular devotion.

  • - How the French Invented the Culinary Profession
    av Amy B. Trubek
    299

    Haute Cuisine shows us how our tastes, desires, and history come together at a common table of appreciation for the French empire of food. Bon appetit!

  • - Causes and Treatment
    av M.D. Beck
    509

    The second edition of Depression: Causes and Treatment provides a contemporary review of the diagnosis, causes, and treatments of depression. Both biological and psychological treatment approaches are described.

  • - Imagining the Book in Reformation England
    av James Kearney
    949

    James Kearney engages with recent work in the history of the book and the history of religion to investigate the crisis of the book occasioned by the Reformation's simultaneous faith in text and distrust of material forms.

  • av Martin Ostwald
    949

    Renowned scholar of Ancient Greek Martin Ostwald explains, for a modern audience, the terms by which the ancient Greeks saw and lived their lives-and influenced ours.

  • av N. O. Body
    325,-

    The first translation into English of a startling 1907 memoir of a writer who was born a boy, was raised as a girl, and who lived as a man. Who was the real N.O. Body, and why did he go to such lengths to hide not just his name but his Jewish identity?

  • - Nonhuman Beings in Early Modern Literature
    av Bruce Thomas Boehrer
    759,-

    Animal Characters follows five species through the literature of early modern Europe. The horse, the parrot, the cat, the turkey, and the sheep all undergo a dramatic change in character as European writers begin to develop a new interest in-and understanding of-human character in its relation to literature.

  • av Frances Trix
    669

    Baba Rexheb founded the first community of the Bektashi order in America. This ethnographic biography recounts his life through lived example and through stories collected during Frances Trix's more than twenty years of study with the dervish.

  • - Land of the Snow Lion
    av Andrea Baldeck
    499,-

  • - American Maritime Culture in the Age of Revolution
    av Paul A. Gilje
    389

    Talks about what liberty meant to an important group of common men in American society, those who lived and worked on the waterfront and aboard ships. This book shows that the idealized vision of liberty associated with the Founding Fathers had a much more immediate and complex meaning than previously thought.

  • - The Culture of Collecting in Early Modern England
    av Marjorie Swann
    955

  • av Shahram Khosravi
    335

    In this ethnography of contemporary youth culture in Iran's capital, Shahram Khosravi examines the practices of everyday life through which young Tehranis demonstrate defiance against the official culture and the parental generation.

  • - A Political and Cultural Critique
    av Makau Mutua
    389

    Human Rights: A Political and Cultural Critique provides a bracing and controversial analysis of the scope of human rights and lays the groundwork for a multicultural and more universal understanding of these rights.

  • - Gordion Special Studies IV
    av Lynn E. Roller
    915

    Lynn E. Roller focuses on a series of stone blocks with incised figural and abstract drawings recovered from early Phrygian structures at Gordion.

  • - Authorship and Modernity in the Old Regime
    av Geoffrey Turnovsky
    859

    This study offers a new reading of the development of modern authorship in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century France, through a detailed reexamination of one of the central mythologies of this evolution: the author's passage from dependence on patronage to the autonomy of the market.

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