Greek Vases in the J. Paul Getty Museum
Title | Greek Vases in the J. Paul Getty Museum PDF eBook |
Author | The J. Paul Getty Museum |
Publisher | Getty Publications |
Pages | 201 |
Release | 1991 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN | 0892361840 |
Euripidis Tragoedia Hippolytus quam
Title | Euripidis Tragoedia Hippolytus quam PDF eBook |
Author | Euripides |
Publisher | |
Pages | 728 |
Release | 1822 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Contested Records
Title | Contested Records PDF eBook |
Author | Michael Leong |
Publisher | University of Iowa Press |
Pages | 281 |
Release | 2020-05-01 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1609386906 |
Why have so many contemporary poets turned to source material, from newspapers to governmental records, as inspiration for their poetry? How can citational poems offer a means of social engagement? Contested Records analyzes how some of the most well-known twenty-first century North American poets work with fraught documents. Whether it’s the legal paperwork detailing the murder of 132 African captives, state transcriptions of the last words of death row inmates, or testimony from miners and rescue workers about a fatal mine disaster, author Michael Leong reveals that much of the power of contemporary poetry rests in its potential to select, adapt, evaluate, and extend public documentation. Examining the use of documents in the works of Kenneth Goldsmith, Vanessa Place, Amiri Baraka, Claudia Rankine, M. NourbeSe Philip, and others, Leong reveals how official records can evoke a wide range of emotions—from hatred to veneration, from indifference to empathy, from desire to disgust. He looks at techniques such as collage, plagiarism, re-reporting, and textual outsourcing, and evaluates some of the most loved—and reviled—contemporary North American poems. Ultimately, Leong finds that if bureaucracy and documentation have the power to police and traumatize through the exercise of state power, then so, too, can document-based poetry function as an unofficial, counterhegemonic, and popular practice that authenticates marginalized experiences at the fringes of our cultural memory.
Postmodern Plagiarisms
Title | Postmodern Plagiarisms PDF eBook |
Author | Mirjam Horn |
Publisher | Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG |
Pages | 433 |
Release | 2015-07-01 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 311039426X |
This monograph takes on the question of how literary plagiarism is defined, exposed, and sanctioned in Western culture and how appropriating language assigned to another author can be considered a radical subversive act in postmodern US-American literature. While various forms of art such as music, painting, or theater have come to institutionalize appropriation as a valid mode to ventilate what authorship, originality, and the anxiety of influence may mean, the literary sphere still has a hard time acknowledging the unmarked acquisition of words, ideas, and manuscripts. The author shows how postmodern plagiarism in particular serves as a literary strategy of appropriation at the interface between literary economics, law, and theoretical discourses of literature. She investigates the complex expectations surrounding the strong link between an individual author subject and its alienable text, a link that several postmodern writers powerfully question and violate. Identifying three distinct practices of postmodern plagiarism, the book examines their specific situatedness, precepts, and subversive potential as litmus tests for the literary market, and the ongoing dynamic notion of the concepts authorship, originality, and creativity.
Unnatural Ecopoetics
Title | Unnatural Ecopoetics PDF eBook |
Author | Sarah Nolan |
Publisher | University of Nevada Press |
Pages | 233 |
Release | 2017-04-28 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0874174686 |
What constitutes an environment in American literature is an issue that has undergone much debate across environmental humanities in the last decade. In the field, some have argued that environments are markedly natural or wild sites while others contend literary spaces can be both wild and urban, or even cultural. Yet, few of the works produced to date have addressed the pronounced influence the author of a text has on a literary environment. Despite exciting work on materiality and culture in conceptions of environments, critics have not yet fully examined the contributions of poetry’s language, form, and self-awareness in rethinking what constitutes an environment. By approaching environments in a new way, Nolan closes this gap and recognizes how contemporary poets employ self-reflexive commentary and formal experimentation in order to create new natural/cultural environments on the page. She proposes a radical new direction for ecopoetics and deploys it in relation to four major American poets. Working from literal to textual spaces through the contemporary poetry of A.R. Ammons’s Garbage, Lyn Hejinian’s My Life, Susan Howe’s The Midnight, and Kenneth Goldsmith’s Seven American Deaths and Disasters, the book presents applications of unnatural ecopoetics in poetic environments, ones that do not engage with traditional ideas of nature and would otherwise remain outside the scope of ecocritical and ecopoetic studies. Nolan proposes a new practical approach for reading poetic language. Ecocriticism is a very fluid and evolving discipline, and Nolan’s pioneering new book pushes the boundaries of second-wave ecopoetics—the fundamental issue being what is nature/natural, and how does poetic language, particularly self-conscious contemporary poetic agency, contribute to and complicate that question.
Literature and the Global Contemporary
Title | Literature and the Global Contemporary PDF eBook |
Author | Sarah Brouillette |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 233 |
Release | 2017-11-03 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 3319630555 |
This book attempts to understand what ‘contemporary’ has meant, and should mean, for literary studies. The essays in this volume suggest that an attentive reading of recent global literatures challenges the idea that our contemporary moment is best characterized as a timeless, instantaneous ‘now’. The contributors to this book argue that global literatures help us to conceive of the contemporary as an always plural, heterogeneous, and contested temporality. Far from suggesting that we replace theories of an omnipresent ‘end of history’ with a traditional, single, diachronic timeline, this book encourages the development of such a timeline’s rigorous inverse: a synchronic, multi-faceted and multi-temporal history of the contemporary in literature, and thus of contemporary global literatures. It opens up the concept of the contemporary for comparative study by unlocking its temporal, logical, political, and ultimately aesthetic and literary complexity.
H. J. ... Susanna, tragoedia [in five acts and in verse].
Title | H. J. ... Susanna, tragoedia [in five acts and in verse]. PDF eBook |
Author | Hadrianus JORDANUS |
Publisher | |
Pages | 210 |
Release | 1654 |
Genre | |
ISBN |