ALBERT

All Library Books, journals and Electronic Records Telegrafenberg

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
  • thema EDItEUR::D Biography, Literature and Literary studies
  • MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute  (4)
  • English  (4)
  • Czech
  • German
  • Miscellaneous languages
  • Turkish
Collection
Language
  • English  (4)
  • Czech
  • German
  • Miscellaneous languages
  • Turkish
Years
  • 1
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-24
    Description: This e-book explores the growth and development of Nordic modernisms in a European context. Concentrating on and yet not limiting itself to the study of literary texts, the book shows that the emergence of modernism in the Nordic countries is linked to, and inspired by, the innovative works published in Western Europe and the USA towards the end of the nineteenth century and in the first decades of the twentieth century. Presenting Nordic art as multi-dimensional and dynamic, it also shows that, while responding to aspects of these innovative works, Nordic modernism itself contributed to modernism as a complex international trend. The plural form “modernisms” in the book’s title indicates that the contributors adopt an understanding of modernism that, while recognizing the importance of the modernist movement between circa 1890 and 1940, is sufficiently elastic to include various forms of extension and continuation of Nordic modernisms in the post-war period. The book shows that the experience of crisis—cultural, political, moral, aesthetic—that underlies modernist artists’ invention of radically new forms of expression was by no means limited to just one country or one identifiable group of writers; nor was it, as modernisms’ global relevance makes clear, restricted to just one continent. At the level of historical reality, the First World War represents the culmination of a crisis which had its beginnings several decades earlier. The Second World War, along with the Holocaust, represents a second culmination of the crisis, and there is, this book suggests, a sense in which the experience of crisis has continued to influence and shape Nordic literature written in the post-war period. Over the first two decades of the twenty-first century, the experience of crisis has increasingly been extended to include a growing uncertainty about the future prompted by the reality of climate change.
    Keywords: modernisms ; Nordic ; European ; literature ; translation ; decadence ; William Faulkner ; Swedish literary criticism ; Nobel Prize ; modernism ; reception history ; aesthetics and ideology ; meaning and significance ; theater ; avant-garde ; Norwegian literature ; Scandinavian modernism ; cross-fertilization ; circus ; meta-cultural code ; modernist aesthetics ; Nordic modernism ; poetry ; surrealism ; dream ; urban space ; gender performativity ; Hamsun’s Hunger ; Sandel’s Alberta and Freedom ; modern metropolis ; streetwalking ; science fiction ; contemporary poetry ; modernisation ; secularisation ; Henrik Ibsen ; Rosmersholm ; Sigmund Freud ; James Joyce ; Ulysses ; retranslation ; Ibsen ; Henrik ; Oz ; Amos ; Grossman ; David ; Goldberg ; Leah ; Israel ; Israeli literature ; Peer Gynt ; Hedda Gabler ; adaptation ; Zionism ; history of modernism ; geography of modernism ; literary periods ; modernism and realism ; modernism and tradition ; narrative crisis ; reception ; n/a ; thema EDItEUR::D Biography, Literature and Literary studies
    Language: English
    Format: image/jpeg
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-24
    Description: This collection focuses on the legacy of Old English poetry and includes new interpretations of works such as Exeter Book Riddle 5, which provides an enduring legacy of social critique crafted through humor; the three manuscripts that contain the Solomon and Saturn dialogues, which reveal a shift in the use of poetry over time; Fates of the Apostles in which a previously unseen eighth rune is semiotically operative along with Cynewulf’s signature; The Wife’s Lament, in which the cave occupied by the wife has its archeological antecedents in early medieval rock-cut buildings; The Ruin, in which both the poem’s text and the silent spaces of wyrd’s traces are inscribed upon the material manuscript; the history of the reception of the riddles, which is instrumental in inspiring one of the acknowledged classic ghost stories of the twentieth century; tears and weeping in the whole corpus of Old English literature; and Beowulf, in which the figures of the stag and wolf play an important role in the thematic design of the poem but have not been examined before. The reprint is prefaced with a detailed account of the scholarly contributions to Old English studies by John D. Niles.
    Keywords: old English poetry ; runology ; Vercelli Book ; Cynewulf ; semiotics ; Multiliteralism ; Old English poetry ; Old English riddles ; Exeter Book ; Riddle 5 ; shields ; cutting boards ; prosopopoeia ; agency ; social critique ; humor ; Old English literature ; reception history ; medievalism ; riddles ; The Husband’s Message ; Montague Rhodes James (1862–1936) ; ghost stories ; horror genre ; supernatural fiction ; The Ruin ; Old English poetics ; Beowulf ; animal studies ; medieval hunting ; monsters ; Solomon and Saturn ; codicological reading ; Incarnational poetics ; compilation ; monastic poetics ; Old English ; wisdom ; medieval dialogue ; Anglo-Saxon culture ; medieval Christian tradition ; emotions ; hagiography ; Old English prose ; Latin literature ; cave ; cruel husband ; oaths ; the word bot ; rock-cut buildings ; pagan temple site ; longing and loneliness ; the “imagery of silence” ; thema EDItEUR::D Biography, Literature and Literary studies
    Language: English
    Format: image/jpeg
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-24
    Description: This Special Issue showcases poets who enhance the breadth of modernist literary practices. The cohering concept is a complex relationship to both gender and modernity through original experiments with language. Leading scholars explore writers who both fit and extend orthodox modernist histories: Marianne Moore, H.D., Edna St Vincent Millay, Dorothy Parker, Katherine Mansfield, and Charlotte Mew were born around the cusp of the twentieth century and flourished during the 1920s and 1930s; Lynette Roberts, Helen Adam and Hope Mirrlees were contemporaries but publishing or recognition came later; the next generation can include Gwendolyn Brooks, Stevie Smith and Muriel Spark; Veronica Forrest-Thomson represents a third generation who published into the 1980s, while Frances Presley and M. NourbeSe Philip hinge this group with the contemporary poets Carol Watts and Natasha Trethewey, whose works continue and rejuvenate progressive stylistics. The essays offer new readings of both well-known and unfamiliar poets. They are truly groundbreaking in plundering diverse theoretical fields in ways that disturb any lingering notions of a homogenized women’s poetry. The authors supplant into literary poetic analysis notions of geometry and mathematics, maritime materialities, tourism and taxonomy, architecture, classicism, folk art, Christianity and death, whimsy and empathy.
    Keywords: H.D. ; Helen in Egypt ; Adorno ; late modernism ; epic ; avant-garde ; Gwendolyn Brooks ; architecture ; modernity ; Chicago ; Katherine Mansfield ; symbolism ; fin-de-siècle ; decadence ; modernism ; poetry ; Arthur Symons ; Stevie Smith ; T.S. Eliot ; The Waste Land ; Greek gods ; female protagonists ; Christianity ; suicide ; death ; Charlotte Mew ; Modernism ; empathy ; Edna St. Vincent Millay ; masculinity ; lyric ; drama ; verse drama ; gender ; genre ; race ; tourism ; taxonomy ; poetics ; Marianne Moore ; Natasha Trethewey ; Thomas Jefferson ; Scotland ; ballads ; kaleidoscope ; Charles Bernstein ; Edwin Morgan ; folk art ; Welsh Modernism ; Feminism ; nationalism ; ethnography ; geomodernisms ; modernist poetics ; Caribbean poetry ; Zong! ; M. NourbeSe Philip ; black poetry ; critical ocean studies ; multispecies ; materiality ; ecocriticism ; Moore ; Parker ; whimsy ; New York ; geometry ; place ; site-specific poetry ; mathematics ; metaphor ; Exmoor ; mid-Wales ; stone settings ; Zeta function ; prime numbers ; pastoral ; thema EDItEUR::D Biography, Literature and Literary studies
    Language: English
    Format: application/octet-stream
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-24
    Description: This reprint aims to investigate some of the numerous ways in which Christianity venerated and represented the Virgin Mary in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Fifteen researchers in various areas of the Arts and Humanities have brought together here their efforts to address in part this inexhaustible objective. The reprint is divided into two main parts. In one of them, composed of six chapters, we study some of the several ways in which the Christian faithful rendered worship and devotion to the Virgin Mary during the more than one thousand years under consideration. The other part, made up of seven chapters, analyzes various iconographic manifestations through which medieval and Renaissance Christians made their devotion to the mother of Christ visible in pictorial or sculptural forms. Therefore, this reprint will be very useful not only for specialists in Christian studies, especially in Marian themes but also for those interested in the development of the societies and cultures of medieval and Renaissance Europe.
    Keywords: Mariology ; Marian iconography ; Mary’s divine motherhood ; Annunciation ; theological sources ; doctrinal symbol ; John Duns Scotus ; medieval theology ; God’s eternal plan ; the dogma of the Immaculate Conception ; Virgin Mary ; free will ; Thomism ; Camino de Santiago ; medieval pilgrimage ; cult of saints ; Mozarabic rite ; chant ; responsory ; sequence ; Sainte-Foy at Conques ; relief sculpture ; divine motherhood ; perpetual virginity ; liturgical hymns ; Renaissance art ; virtues ; virginity ; medieval women ; liturgy ; medieval music ; medieval art ; Hildegard of Bingen ; Scivias ; Christianity ; Christology ; Martin Luther ; justification ; theology of the Cross ; suffering ; iconography ; Lucas Cranach the Elder ; St. Bernard of Clairvaux ; mariology ; beauty ; medieval aesthetics ; medieval philosophy ; Dormition of the Theotokos ; Dormition iconography ; mandorla ; Glory of God ; Byzantine art ; post-Byzantine art ; the Virgin of the Girdle ; troper-proser ; liturgical song ; medieval devotion ; miracles ; Tortosa ; annunciation ; erotic symbolism ; mystical wedding ; political theology ; sacred play ; Nursing Madonna ; Madonna of Humility ; Eve ; Mary ; breastfeeding ; redemption ; Marian miracles ; Gautier de Coinci ; Illuminated Manuscripts ; miraculous images ; medieval visual culture ; thema EDItEUR::D Biography, Literature and Literary studies
    Language: English
    Format: image/jpeg
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...