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Articles 1 - 30 of 2622
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Review Of Women Who Fly: Goddesses, Witches, Mystics, And Other Airborne Females By Serinity Young, Nancy Schultz
Review Of Women Who Fly: Goddesses, Witches, Mystics, And Other Airborne Females By Serinity Young, Nancy Schultz
Nancy Lusignan Schultz
Turning “Bad Jews Into Worse Christians”: Hermann Adler And The London Society For Promoting Christianity Amongst The Jews, Robert Ellison
Turning “Bad Jews Into Worse Christians”: Hermann Adler And The London Society For Promoting Christianity Amongst The Jews, Robert Ellison
Robert Ellison
This paper explores how sermons contributed to Jewish-Christian relations in Victorian England. I begin with a rhetorical analysis of sermons preached on behalf of the London Society for Promoting Christianity among the Jews, the largest and best known missionary organization of its kind. I then examine a collection of sermons in which Hermann Adler, then rabbi of London’s Bayswater Synagogue and later Chief Rabbi of the British Empire, pushes back against their efforts, offering the “true explanations” of passages which, in his view, had been improperly employed by Christian preachers. Finally, I trace a kind of “feedback loop” in which …
Shakespeare And Posthumanist Theory, Jean Feerick
Review Of "Jews In The Early Modern Imagination: A Scattered Nation", S. Matthew Biberman
Review Of "Jews In The Early Modern Imagination: A Scattered Nation", S. Matthew Biberman
Matthew Biberman
No abstract provided.
Review Of "The Accomodated Jew: English Antisemitism From Bede To Milton", S. Matthew Biberman
Review Of "The Accomodated Jew: English Antisemitism From Bede To Milton", S. Matthew Biberman
Matthew Biberman
No abstract provided.
Orlando: A Biography, Virginia Woolf, Suzanne Raitt, Ian Blyth
Orlando: A Biography, Virginia Woolf, Suzanne Raitt, Ian Blyth
Suzanne Raitt
Orlando, a novel loosely based on the life of Vita Sackville-West, Virginia Woolf's lover and friend, is one of Woolf's most playful and tantalizing works. This edition provides readers with a fully collated and annotated text. A substantial introduction charts the birth of the novel in the romance between Woolf and Sackville-West, and the role it played in the evolution and eventual fading of that romance. Extensive explanatory notes reveal the extent to which the novel is embedded in Woolf's knowledge of Sackville-West, her family history and her writings. Thorough annotation of every literary and historical allusion in the text …
Going Home, Glen Davis
Eng 1001g-061: Composition And Language, Glen Davis
Eng 1002g-059: Composition And Literature, Glen Davis
Eng 1002g-059: Composition And Literature, Glen Davis
Glen Davis
No abstract provided.
Teaching Dystopia, Amy Wong
Teaching Dystopia, Amy Wong
Amy Wong
This year, those of us who work in college classrooms kicked off our semesters with the spectacle of Trump’s inauguration: its bluffed militarism, its dark vision, its citation, in effect, of Bane, from the Batman dystopia The Dark Knight Rises. Everything about the inauguration presaged the bitter, disputatious, spectacle-driven manias that have come to mark the 45th Presidency. It was clear, on that grey January day, that dystopia was newly in vogue as he intoned: Mothers and children trapped in poverty in our inner cities, rusted out factories scattered like tombstones across the landscape of our nation. We all bleed …
Politics, Inclusion, And Social Practice, Ronjaunee Chatterjee, Amy Wong
Politics, Inclusion, And Social Practice, Ronjaunee Chatterjee, Amy Wong
Amy Wong
"In the wake of the American election, Elaine Hadley’s 'Closing Remarks' from v21’s b2o issue—that we are writing, living, and teaching in a 'critical moment, some might even say a survivalist moment' in which 'the power of positive psychology does not seem adequate to the times'—appear chilling in their urgency. Hadley cautions against a pleasure and optimism largely disengaged from feminist and class critiques, as well as from what she calls 'Politics with a big P.'"
~article excerpt~
Saternus Dissertation-Multilingual Literacy Practices In One Community.Pdf, Julie Saternus
Saternus Dissertation-Multilingual Literacy Practices In One Community.Pdf, Julie Saternus
Julie Saternus
Comments On Amy Clampitt’S 'Matoaka', Terry L. Meyers
Comments On Amy Clampitt’S 'Matoaka', Terry L. Meyers
Terry Meyers
No abstract provided.
“The Knots Within”: Translations, Tapestries, And The Art Of Reading Backwards, Kathryn Vomero Santos
“The Knots Within”: Translations, Tapestries, And The Art Of Reading Backwards, Kathryn Vomero Santos
Kathryn Vomero Santos
This article presents a new approach to reading the famous tapestry metaphor that has circulated in discourses on translation for centuries. Popularized by Miguel de Cervantes in the second part of Don Quixote (1615), the image of the tapestry’s two sides—the smooth front side and the messy reverse side—has long been assumed to illustrate the uneven relationship between an original and its translation. Following the lead of seventeenth-century English translator Leonard Digges, who urges readers to remember “the knots within” that make the tapestry possible, the article advocates for a method of reading backwards toward a history of translation …
Hosting Language: Immigration And Translation In The Merry Wives Of Windsor, Kathryn Vomero Santos
Hosting Language: Immigration And Translation In The Merry Wives Of Windsor, Kathryn Vomero Santos
Kathryn Vomero Santos
No abstract provided.
Modernism And Time Machines Book Preview, Charles M. Tung
Modernism And Time Machines Book Preview, Charles M. Tung
Charles M. Tung
Hd^Pro Avengers: Endgame #2019# Full 4k Movie, Joes Boss
Hd^Pro Avengers: Endgame #2019# Full 4k Movie, Joes Boss
eerii pinoy
A Lethal Spill, Gillian Carney
Sex And Motherhood In Shakespeare: A Power Born From Disgust, Mallori Sorensen
Sex And Motherhood In Shakespeare: A Power Born From Disgust, Mallori Sorensen
Mallori Sorensen
Marital Law In He Knew He Was Right, Suzanne Raitt
Marital Law In He Knew He Was Right, Suzanne Raitt
Suzanne Raitt
Bringing together leading and newly emerging scholars, The Routledge Research Companion to Anthony Trollope offers a comprehensive overview of Trollope scholarship and suggests new directions in Trollope studies. The first volume designed especially for advanced graduate students and scholars, the collection features essays on virtually every topic relevant to Trollope research, including the law, gender, politics, evolution, race, anti-Semitism, biography, philosophy, illustration, aging, sport, emigration, and the global and regional worlds.
"Contagious Ectasy": May Sinclair's War Journals, Suzanne Raitt
"Contagious Ectasy": May Sinclair's War Journals, Suzanne Raitt
Suzanne Raitt
The Great War stimulated a sudden growth in the novel industry, and the trauma of the war continued to reverberate through much of the fiction published in the years that followed its inglorious end. The essays in this volume, by a number of leading critics in the field, considers some of the best-known, and some of the least-known, women writers on whose work the war left its shadow. Ranging from Virginia Woolf, Katherine Mansfield, and H.D. to Vernon Lee, Frances Bellerby, and Mary Butts, the contributors challenge current thinking about women's responses to the First World War and explore the …
“And Those That Are Fools, Let Them Use Their Talents”: Looking At The Power Of Music In The Hands Of Shakespeare’S Wise Fools
Noelle Conder
Science, Poetry, And Defining Life In The Romantic Era: “Life! What Is Life?”, Michelle Trantham
Science, Poetry, And Defining Life In The Romantic Era: “Life! What Is Life?”, Michelle Trantham
Michelle Trantham
“Boadicea Onstage Before 1800, A Theatrical And Colonial History.” Studies In English Literature 1500-1900 49.3 (Summer 2009): 595-614., Wendy Nielsen
“Boadicea Onstage Before 1800, A Theatrical And Colonial History.” Studies In English Literature 1500-1900 49.3 (Summer 2009): 595-614., Wendy Nielsen
Wendy Nielsen
This essay examines the theatrical legacy of Boadicea, the British warrior queen defeated by the Romans around 61 AD, in three plays: John Fletcher's "The Tragedy of Bonduca, or the British Heroine" and two unrelated dramas titled "Boadicea" by Charles Hopkins and Richard Glover. Performance histories attempt to explain why audiences respond to Boadicea with ambivalence. Each production underplays the defeated queen and gives starring roles to one or more of her daughters and a male lead, who contrast with Boadicea's supposed brutality and provide British audiences with lessons about ways to rule in an ostensibly civilized fashion.
[吻定情] Fall In Love At First Kiss Movie Online Full Free, 吻定情 Fallinloveatfirst Kiss
[吻定情] Fall In Love At First Kiss Movie Online Full Free, 吻定情 Fallinloveatfirst Kiss
吻定情 FallinLoveatFirst Kiss
Three Nahuatl Hymns On The Mother Archetype: An Interpretive Commentary, Willard Gingerich
Three Nahuatl Hymns On The Mother Archetype: An Interpretive Commentary, Willard Gingerich
Willard Gingerich
On February 23, 1978, in a large dig just off the central Zocalo (plaza) of Mexico city, within 300 yards of the great Cathedral, one of the most significant archeological finds of the decade came to light. It is a circular slab of pink stone, measuring three meters in diameter and estimated to weigh over eight tons, upon which is carved a mutilated female figure with arms, legs, and head severed from the torso.
Armand Schwerner: An Interview, Willard Gingerich
Armand Schwerner: An Interview, Willard Gingerich
Willard Gingerich
In an interview, writer and educator Armand Schwerner discusses his recent and earlier Tablets, the creation of the icons in them, and his Scholar/Translator. Schwerner projects another 21 Tablets.
Sister Carrie---Theodore Dreiser, New York: Doubleday, Page & Co., 1900, Elliot Gorn
Sister Carrie---Theodore Dreiser, New York: Doubleday, Page & Co., 1900, Elliot Gorn
Elliot Gorn
Facing the naturalistic, nonjudgmental rendering in Sister Carrie of the stresses of survival in Chicago and New York was seen by some as scandalous. Nonetheless, Theodore Dreiser’s first novel eventually became an American classic and has been published in countless editions. The Heritage edition (1937) includes illustrations by Reginald Marsh (1898– 1954), including one in which the main character, a country girl on a train bound for Chicago, is approached by a salesman whose mistress she will eventually become.
Storm Clouds On The Horizon: Feminist Ontologies And The Problem Of Gender, Pamela L. Caughie, Emily Datskou, Rebecca Parker
Storm Clouds On The Horizon: Feminist Ontologies And The Problem Of Gender, Pamela L. Caughie, Emily Datskou, Rebecca Parker
Pamela Caughie
Feminist digital humanities is no longer focused primarily on recovering and preserving works by women authors. Feminist scholars are currently engaged in changing information design and data visualizations. However, as feminists seek to create new ontologies of gender, they face difficulties posed not only by current encoding standards, but by changing concepts of gender. Can ontologies ever capture the complex, multi-layered, dynamic nature of gender identities? This question is especially challenging when dealing with modernist works that represent gender and sexual identities at the very moment of their emergence as such. Our work on a digital edition and archive of …
Curriculum Vitae: Transsexual Life Writing And The Biofictional Novel, Pamela Caughie
Curriculum Vitae: Transsexual Life Writing And The Biofictional Novel, Pamela Caughie
Pamela Caughie
The complex relation between bio and fiction, life and writing, is central to the project I am currently working on, a comparative scholarly edition of Man into Woman: An Authentic Record of a Change of Sex (1933), the life narrative of Lili Elbe, formerly Einar Wegener, the Danish artist who became Lili Elvenes (her legal name) through a series of surgeries in 1930. In chapter six, Andreas Sparre (the fictional name used for Wegener in the narrative) offers to tell his life story to his friends, Niels and Inger, on the night before his first surgery, his last night as …