Black Sphinx

Black Sphinx
Title Black Sphinx PDF eBook
Author John C. Welchman
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2010
Genre Art, Modern
ISBN 9783905770964

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Edited and with introduction by John C. Welchman. Text by Jessica Chalmers, Janet Whitmore, Simon Critchley.

The Black Sphinx

The Black Sphinx
Title The Black Sphinx PDF eBook
Author Matt Hart
Publisher Corgi
Pages 0
Release 2006
Genre Children's stories
ISBN 9780552554213

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Set in an alternative Britain where London is only a village, this is a fast and furious fantasy filled with imaginative detail. The spooky hieroglyphic illustrations add real drama and, with plenty of humour, it adds up to a very accessible story for readers aged 9 and above.

Book of the Sphinx

Book of the Sphinx
Title Book of the Sphinx PDF eBook
Author Willis Goth Regier
Publisher U of Nebraska Press
Pages 330
Release 2004-12-01
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780803205260

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Sought, the Sphinx seems everywhere, whether the guardian of the pyramids on Egypt's Giza plateau or the beautiful man-eater with a deadly riddle, to be approached with awful caution. The Sphinx, that icon painted, sculpted, engraved, and exalted in poetry, fiction, and music, so impressed the philosopher Hegel that he pronounced the creature “the symbol of the symbolic itself.” With a wealth of illustrations, Book of the Sphinx confirms Hegel's lofty judgment, finding the Sphinx everywhere: in tragedies, paintings, opera, murder mysteries, brothels, bars, and advertisements. Pursuing the Sphinx through kaleidoscopic sightings and encyclopedic observations, Willis Goth Regier plumbs the symbol's mysteries, conducting the reader down ever more perplexing and intriguing paths. Wonderfully readable, his highly idiosyncratic tour of the ages and the arts leads at last to a conception of the Sphinx that embraces nothing less than all that is unknowable—proving once again that confronting a Sphinx is one of the most dangerous and exhilarating adventures of the imagination.

Sphinx

Sphinx
Title Sphinx PDF eBook
Author Anne Garreta
Publisher Deep Vellum Publishing
Pages 153
Release 2015-04-21
Genre Fiction
ISBN 1941920098

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A landmark literary event: the first novel by a female member of Oulipo in English, a sexy genderless love story.

Reading the Sphinx

Reading the Sphinx
Title Reading the Sphinx PDF eBook
Author L. Parramore
Publisher Springer
Pages 201
Release 2008-10-13
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0230615708

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Reading the Sphinx unearths buried conflicts in religion, myth, and the memory of Egypt in the West, illuminating issues of identity, inheritance, gender, and sexuality through cultural productions ranging from Herodotus to Freud.

Tomorrow's Sphinx

Tomorrow's Sphinx
Title Tomorrow's Sphinx PDF eBook
Author Clare Bell
Publisher Laurel Leaf
Pages 292
Release 1988-06-01
Genre Cheetahs
ISBN 9780440201243

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Two unusual black cheetahs share a mental link, one cat coming from the past to reveal scenes from his life with the young pharaoh Tutankhamen, and one struggling to survive in a future world ravaged by ecological disaster.

Race and the Writing of History

Race and the Writing of History
Title Race and the Writing of History PDF eBook
Author Maghan Keita
Publisher Oxford University Press, USA
Pages 225
Release 2000
Genre African American historians
ISBN 0195112741

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Despite increased interest in recent years in the role of race in Western culture, scholars have neglected much of the body of work produced in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries by black intellectuals. For example, while DuBois' thoughts about Africa may be familiar to contemporary academics, those of his important precursors and contemporaries are not widely known. Similarly, although contemporary figures such as Martin Bernal, Molefi Assante, and other "Afrocentrists" are the subject of heated debate, such debates are rarely illuminated by an awareness of the traditions that preceded them. Race and The Writing of History redresses this imbalance, using Bernal's Black Athena and its critics as an introduction to the historical inquiries of African-American intellectuals and many of their African counterparts. Keita examines the controversial legacy of writing history in America and offers a new perspective on the challenge of building new historiographies and epistemologies. As a result, this book sheds new light on how ideas about race and racism have shaped the stories we tell about ourselves.