Works

Works
Title Works PDF eBook
Author George Gordon Byron Baron Byron
Publisher
Pages 1002
Release 1835
Genre
ISBN

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Arn's Revenge

Arn's Revenge
Title Arn's Revenge PDF eBook
Author Jean-Pierre Dionnet
Publisher Humanoids Inc
Pages 62
Release 2014-03-19
Genre Comics & Graphic Novels
ISBN 1594655979

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A collection of stories featuring an unstoppable army and an indomitable hero, all set amid the backdrop of barbaric and medieval lands.

Back of War

Back of War
Title Back of War PDF eBook
Author Henry Kittredge Norton
Publisher
Pages 398
Release 1928
Genre International law
ISBN

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Disputed Desert

Disputed Desert
Title Disputed Desert PDF eBook
Author Baz Lecocq
Publisher BRILL
Pages 468
Release 2010-11-15
Genre Social Science
ISBN 9004190287

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This book deals with the relation between the Malian state and the Tuareg people in the late 20th century, which has been characterized by three violent uprisings against Malian authority by Tuareg nationalists: between 1963 and 1964, between 1990 and 1996, and again between 2006 and 2009. In presenting a detailed history of this conflict between an African state and a people inhabiting it involuntarily, a number of social and political tensions are brought to the fore which haunt all of the Sahel today: the heritage of slavery, local and European concepts of race and the racialisation of social and political relations, colonial rule, the inchoate process of decolonisation, and the presence of competing nationalist forces in one postcolonial state.

Scanderbeide

Scanderbeide
Title Scanderbeide PDF eBook
Author Margherita Sarrocchi
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Pages 492
Release 2007-11-01
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0226735060

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The first historical heroic epic authored by a woman, Scanderbeide recounts the exploits of fifteenth-century Albanian warrior-prince George Scanderbeg and his war of resistance against the Ottoman sultanate. Filled with scenes of intense and suspenseful battles contrasted with romantic episodes, Scanderbeide combines the action and fantasy characteristic of the genre with analysis of its characters’ motivations. In selecting a military campaign as her material and epic poetry as her medium, Margherita Sarrocchi (1560?–1617) not only engages in the masculine subjects of political conflict and warfare but also tackles a genre that was, until that point, the sole purview of men. First published posthumously in 1623, Scanderbeide reemerges here in an adroit English prose translation that maintains the suspense of the original text and gives ample context to its rich cultural implications.

Exodus

Exodus
Title Exodus PDF eBook
Author Charles Hoyle
Publisher
Pages 416
Release 1807
Genre Bible
ISBN

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A Constant Journey

A Constant Journey
Title A Constant Journey PDF eBook
Author Erika Ostrovsky
Publisher SIU Press
Pages 352
Release 1991
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780809316427

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From the creation of a neuter pronoun in her earliest work, L’Opoponax, to the confusion of genres in her most recent fiction, Virgile, non, Monique Wittig uses literary subversion and invention to accomplish what Erika Ostrovsky appropriately defines as renversement, the annihilation of existing literary canons and the creation of highly innovative constructs. Erika Ostrovsky explores those aspects of Wittig’s work that best illustrate her literary approach. Among the countless revolutionary devices that Wittig uses to achieve renversement are the feminization of masculine gender names, the reorganization of myth patterns, and the replacement of traditional punctuation with her own system of grammatical emphasis and separation. It is the unexpected quantity and quality of such literary devices that make reading Monique Wittig’s fiction a fresh and rewarding experience. Such literary devices have earned Wittig the acclaim of her critics and peers—Marguerite Duras, Mary McCarthy, Alain Robbe-Grillet, Nathalie Sarraute, and Claude Simon, to name a few. While analyzing the intrinsic value of each of Wittig’s fictions separately, Erika Ostrovsky traces the progressive development of Wittig’s major literary devices as they appear and reappear in her fictions. Ostrovsky maintains that the seeds of those innovations that appear in Wittig’s most recent texts can be found as far back as L’Opoponax. This evidence of progression supports Ostrovsky’s theory that clues to Wittig’s future endeavors can be found in her past.