Guignols Band
Download Guignols Band full books in PDF, epub, and Kindle. Read online free Guignols Band ebook anywhere anytime directly on your device. Fast Download speed and no annoying ads. We cannot guarantee that every ebooks is available!
Author | : Louis-Ferdinand Céline |
Publisher | : New Directions Publishing |
Total Pages | : 294 |
Release | : 1969 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 9780811200189 |
In Guignol's Band, first published in France in 1943, Céline explores the horror of a disordered world.
Author | : Julia Kristeva |
Publisher | : Columbia University Press |
Total Pages | : 324 |
Release | : 2024-03-26 |
Genre | : Psychology |
ISBN | : 0231561415 |
In Powers of Horror, Julia Kristeva offers an extensive and profound consideration of the nature of abjection. Drawing on Freud and Lacan, she analyzes the nature of attitudes toward repulsive subjects and examines the function of these topics in the writings of Louis-Ferdinand Céline, Marcel Proust, James Joyce, and other authors. Kristeva identifies the abject with the eruption of the real and the presence of death. She explores how art and religion each offer ways of purifying the abject, arguing that amid abjection, boundaries between subject and object break down.
Author | : Merlin Thomas |
Publisher | : New Directions Publishing |
Total Pages | : 262 |
Release | : 1980 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 9780811207546 |
This book is neither an apology nor a defense, it's a critical biography of the late French novelist.
Author | : David Hayman |
Publisher | : Cornell University Press |
Total Pages | : 248 |
Release | : 1987 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 9780801420054 |
Author | : Sandrine Sanos |
Publisher | : Stanford University Press |
Total Pages | : 385 |
Release | : 2012-10-24 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0804782830 |
The Aesthetics of Hate examines the writings of a motley collection of interwar far-right intellectuals, showing that they defined Frenchness in racial, gendered, and sexual terms. A broad, ambitious cultural and intellectual history, the book offers a provocative reinterpretation of a topic that has long been the subject of controversy. In works infused with rhetorics of abjection, disgust, and dissolution, such writers as Maulnier, Brasillach, Céline, and Blanchot imagined the nation through figures deemed illegitimate or inferior—Jews, colonial subjects, homosexuals, women. Sanos argues that these intellectuals offered an "aesthetics of hate," reinventing a language of far-right nationalism by appealing to the realm of beauty and the sublime for political solutions. By acknowledging the constitutive relationship of antisemitism and colonial racism at the heart of these canonical writers' nationalism, this book makes us rethink how aesthetics and politics function, how race is imagined and defined, how gender structured far-right thought, and how we conceive of French intellectualism and fascism.
Author | : University of Michigan. School of Music, Theatre & Dance |
Publisher | : UM Libraries |
Total Pages | : |
Release | : 1880 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : |
Includes miscellaneous newsletters (Music at Michigan, Michigan Muse), bulletins, catalogs, programs, brochures, articles, calendars, histories, and posters.
Author | : Duncan Minshull |
Publisher | : Random House |
Total Pages | : 362 |
Release | : 2011-09-30 |
Genre | : Sports & Recreation |
ISBN | : 1448112753 |
'It is good to collect things, but better to go on walks. ' Anatole France. A fundamental act, often taken for granted, yet through the centuries it has inspired a fascinating literature. This, the first comprehensive anthology on the subject, delves into why we walk and how we walk; the differences between the country hike and the city stroll; walking and wooing; walking into trouble and marching out. Then some of us will walk to meet the Maker. A mix of fiction and non-fiction, poetry and drama provides the reader with over two hundred booted authors. Xenophone and Baudelaire, Flora Thompson and Julian Barnes, Mark Twain and Roberto Calasso tramp the pages of this fascinating collection.
Author | : Michael André Bernstein |
Publisher | : Princeton University Press |
Total Pages | : 254 |
Release | : 1992-03-17 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1400820634 |
"You people put importance on your lives. Well, my life has never been important to anyone. I haven't got any guilt about anything," bragged the mass-murderer Charles Manson. "These children that come at you with knives, they are your children. You taught them. I didn't teach them. . . . They are running in the streets--and they are coming right at you!" When a real murderer accuses the society he has brutalized, we are shocked, but we are thrilled by the same accusations when they are mouthed by a fictional rebel, outlaw, or monster. In Bitter Carnival, Michael Andr Bernstein explores this contradiction and defines a new figure: the Abject Hero. Standing at the junction of contestation and conformity, the Abject Hero occupies the logically impossible space created by the intersection of the satanic and the servile. Bernstein shows that we heroicize the Abject Hero because he represents a convention that has become a staple of our common mythology, as seductive in mass culture as it is in high art. Moving from an examination of classical Latin satire; through radically new analyses of Diderot, Dostoevsky, and Cline; and culminating in the courtroom testimony of Charles Manson, Bitter Carnival offers a revisionist rereading of the entire tradition of the "Saturnalian dialogue" between masters and slaves, monarchs and fools, philosophers and madmen, citizens and malcontents. It contests the supposedly regenerative power of the carnivalesque and challenges the pieties of utopian radicalism fashionable in contemporary academic thinking. The clarity of its argument and literary style compel us to confront a powerful dilemma that engages some of the most central issues in literary studies, ethics, cultural history, and critical theory today.
Author | : Larson Powell |
Publisher | : Boydell & Brewer |
Total Pages | : 262 |
Release | : 2013 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1571135723 |
The Differentiation of Modernism analyzes the phenomenon of intermediality in German radio plays, film music, and electronic music of the late modernist period (1945-1980). After 1945, the purist "medium specificity" of high modernism increasingly yielded to the mixed forms of intermediality. Theodor Adorno dubbed this development a "Verfransung," or "fraying of boundaries," between the arts. TheDifferentiation of Modernism analyzes this phenomenon in German electronic media arts of the late modernist period (1945-80): in radio plays, film music, and electronic music. The first part of the book begins with a chapter on Adorno's theory of radio as an instrument of democratization, going on to analyze the relationship of the Hörspiel or radio play to electronic music. In the second part, on film music, a chapter on Adorno and Eisler's Composing for the Film sets the parameters for chapters on the film Das Mädchen Rosemarie (1957) and on the music films of Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet. The third part examines the music of Karlheinz Stockhausen and its relationship to radio, abstract painting, recording technology, and theatrical happenings. The book's central notion of the "differentiation of culture" suggests that late modernism, unlike high modernism, accepted the contingency of modern mass-media driven society and sought to find new forms for it. Larson Powell is Curator's Professor of Film Studies at University of Missouri, Kansas City. He is the author of The Technological Unconscious in German Modernist Literature (Camden House, 2008).
Author | : Louis-Ferdinand Céline |
Publisher | : Alma Books |
Total Pages | : 400 |
Release | : 2012 |
Genre | : French |
ISBN | : 9781847492449 |
The most blackly humorous and disenchanted voice in all of French literature. London Review of Books