Specters of Cavafy

Specters of Cavafy
Title Specters of Cavafy PDF eBook
Author Maria Boletsi
Publisher University of Michigan Press
Pages 330
Release 2024-07-02
Genre History
ISBN 0472904493

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The Greek Alexandrian poet C. P. Cavafy (1863–1933) has been recognized as a central figure in European modernism and world literature. His poetry explored the conditions for animating the past and making lost worlds or people haunt the present. Yet he also described himself as “a poet of the future generations.” Indeed, his writings address concerns and desires that permeate the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. How does poetry concerned with the past, memory, loss, and death, carry futurity? How does it haunt, and how is it haunted by, future presents? Specters of Cavafy broaches these questions by proposing spectral poetics as a novel approach to Cavafy’s work. Drawing from theorizations of specters and haunting, it develops spectrality as a lens for revisiting Cavafy’s poetry and prose, fiction and nonfiction, as well as his poetry’s bearing on our present. By examining Cavafy’s spectral poetics, the book’s first part shows how conjurations work in his writings, and how the spectral permeates the entanglement of modernity and haunting, and of irony and affect. The second part traces the afterlives of specific poems in the Western imagination since the 1990s, in Egypt’s history of debt and colonization, and in Greece during the country’s recent debt crisis. Beyond its original contribution to Cavafy studies, the book proposes tools and modes of reading that are broadly applicable in literary and cultural studies.

E(n)stranged: Rethinking Defamiliarization in Literature and Visual Culture

E(n)stranged: Rethinking Defamiliarization in Literature and Visual Culture
Title E(n)stranged: Rethinking Defamiliarization in Literature and Visual Culture PDF eBook
Author Nilgun Bayraktar
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 305
Release
Genre
ISBN 3031608593

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Barbarian: Explorations of a Western Concept in Theory, Literature, and the Arts

Barbarian: Explorations of a Western Concept in Theory, Literature, and the Arts
Title Barbarian: Explorations of a Western Concept in Theory, Literature, and the Arts PDF eBook
Author Markus Winkler
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 501
Release 2023-07-31
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 3476046117

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Since Greek antiquity, the ‘barbarian’ captivates the Western imaginary and operates as the antipode against which self-proclaimed civilized groups define themselves. Therefore, the study of the cultural history of barbarism is a simultaneous exploration of the shifting contours of European identity. This two-volume co-authored study explores the history of the concept ‘barbarism’ from the 18th century to the present and illuminates its foundational role in modern European and Western identity. It constitutes an original comparative, interdisciplinary exploration of the concept’s modern European and Western history, with emphasis on the role of literature in the concept’s shifting functions. Critically responding to the contemporary popularity of the term ‘barbarian' in political rhetoric and the media, and its violent, exclusionary workings, the study contributes to a historically grounded understanding of this figure’s past and contemporary uses. It combines overviews with detailed analyses of representative works of literature, art, film, philosophy, political and cultural theory, in which “barbarism” figures prominently.

Specters of Cavafy

Specters of Cavafy
Title Specters of Cavafy PDF eBook
Author MARIA. BOLETSI
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2024-07-02
Genre History
ISBN 9780472076840

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Haunting the future through poetry

Barbarism Revisited

Barbarism Revisited
Title Barbarism Revisited PDF eBook
Author
Publisher BRILL
Pages 392
Release 2015-10-27
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9004309276

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The figure of the barbarian has captivated the Western imagination from Greek antiquity to the present. Since the 1990s, the rhetoric of civilization versus barbarism has taken center stage in Western political rhetoric and the media. But how can the longevity and popularity of this opposition be accounted for? Why has it become such a deeply ingrained habit of thought that is still being so effectively mobilized in Western discourses? The twenty essays in this volume revisit well-known and obscure chapters in barbarism's genealogy from new perspectives and through contemporary theoretical idioms. With studies spanning from Greek antiquity to the present, they show how barbarism has functioned as the negative outside separating a civilized interior from a barbarian exterior; as the middle term in-between savagery and civilization in evolutionary models; as a repressed aspect of the civilized psyche; as concomitant with civilization; as a term that confuses fixed notions of space and time; or as an affirmative notion in philosophy and art, signifying radical change and regeneration. Proposing an original interdisciplinary approach to barbarism, this volume includes both overviews of the concept's travels as well as specific case studies of its workings in art, literature, philosophy, film, ethnography, design, and popular culture in various periods, geopolitical contexts, and intellectual traditions. Through this kaleidoscopic view of the concept, it recasts the history of ideas not only as a task for historians, but also literary scholars, art historians, and cultural analysts.

Greek for Reading

Greek for Reading
Title Greek for Reading PDF eBook
Author Gerda M. Seligson
Publisher University of Michigan Press
Pages 364
Release 1994
Genre Foreign Language Study
ISBN 9780472082667

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A highly innovative approach to Classical Greek for beginning students

Specters

Specters
Title Specters PDF eBook
Author Radwa Ashour
Publisher Interlink Books
Pages 0
Release 2010-09-01
Genre Fiction
ISBN 9781566568326

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Winner of the Cairo International Book Fair Prize. Specters tells the story of Radwa and Shagar, two women born the same day. The narrative alternates between their childhoods, their work lives (one a professor of literature and the other of history), their married and unmarried lives, and their respective books. With her novel’s structure, Ashour pays tribute to the Arab qareen (double or companion, and sometimes demon) and the ancient Egyptian ka (the spirit that is born with and accompanies an individual through life and beyond).