A Mad Love

A Mad Love
Author: Émile Zola
Publisher:
Total Pages: 374
Release: 1882
Genre:
ISBN:

The Belly of Paris

The Belly of Paris
Author: Émile Zola
Publisher: Good Press
Total Pages: 383
Release: 2023-12-27
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

The Belly of Paris (Le Ventre de Paris) is the third novel in Émile Zola's twenty-volume series Les Rougon-Macquart, first published in 1873. It is a novel of the teeming life which surrounds the great central markets of Paris. The book was originally translated into English by Henry Vizetelly and published in 1888 under the title Fat and Thin. After Vizetelly's imprisonment for obscene libel the novel was one of those revised and expurgated by his son, Ernest Alfred Vizetelly. The heroine is Lisa Quenu, a daughter of Antoine Macquart. She has become prosperous, and with prosperity her selfishness has increased. Her brother-in-law Florent had escaped from penal servitude in Cayenne and lived for a short time in her house, but she became tired of his presence and ultimately denounced him to the police. Émile Zola (1840 – 1902) was a French writer, the most important exemplar of the literary school of naturalism and an important contributor to the development of theatrical naturalism. He was a major figure in the political liberalization of France.

La Belle Indifference

La Belle Indifference
Author: Lisa Rogal
Publisher:
Total Pages: 92
Release: 2020-09-15
Genre:
ISBN: 9781950055074

Poetry. Women's Studies. "LA BELLE INDIFFERENCE exposes and inverts the conflict of desire, questioning the basis of want, and conceding the impracticality of the self. Rogal's poems capture an inner auto-correcting at play in a boldly contemplative voice with overarching homages to Emily Dickinson that seal the work's paradoxical balance of reservation and avowal. The false enticement of fantasy rings true, providing 'the usual mode / to construct / a scene, ' and quickly imploding."--Emily Toder "This is a book about body in space, a body in space, perhaps a female body in space, perhaps a female's body in space. It's a work of art that seeks a space and is making space for this body that is pre-female, sub-female and supra-female and female-loving and desire-loving and careful and close female-desire-mind observing of that which is desire and that what is done to desire in the female body, to the female's body. I want to say loudly that when I read LA BELLE INDIFFERENCE I didn't feel indifferent, I felt very elated and happy. I want to say that this is also a study of clouds."--Rachel Levitsky "Lisa Rogal's poems trace the distances between bodies, the fantasy of intimacy and the actual fact of closeness, all the unguarded feelings and mixed signals, the strangers who stare at you on the street and you look back and then look away, all the frozen moments when nothing (and everything) happens. 'You can't know what you want, ' she writes, 'when something's being given to you, ' and that's true whenever something is being offered (whether you want it or not). The momentum in Rogal's poems leads her forward and back to a place that may or may not exist, and in the end might sweep her out to sea, but she is never unwilling to risk everything to get there. The poetics of total attention are on display here for your pleasure."--Lewis Warsh

Mona Lisa

Mona Lisa
Author: Dianne Hales
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2014-08-05
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1451658966

The book rests on the premise that the woman in the painting "Mona Lisa" is indeed the person identified in its earliest description: Lisa Gherardini (1479-1542), wife of the Florence merchant Francesco del Giocondo. Dianne Hales has followed facts from the Florence State Archives, to the squalid street where Mona Lisa was born, to the ruins of the convent where she died

The Harlequin Eaters

The Harlequin Eaters
Author: Janet Beizer
Publisher: U of Minnesota Press
Total Pages: 422
Release: 2024-04-02
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1452970467

How representations of the preparation, sale, and consumption of leftovers in nineteenth-century urban France link socioeconomic and aesthetic history The concept of the “harlequin” refers to the practice of reassembling dinner scraps cleared from the plates of the wealthy to sell, replated, to the poor in nineteenth-century Paris. In The Harlequin Eaters, Janet Beizer investigates how the alimentary harlequin evolved in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries from the earlier, similarly patchworked Commedia dell’arte Harlequin character and can be used to rethink the entangled place of class, race, and food in the longer history of modernism. By superimposing figurations of the edible harlequin taken from a broad array of popular and canonical novels, newspaper articles, postcard photographs, and lithographs, Beizer shows that what is at stake in nineteenth-century discourses surrounding this mixed meal are representations not only of food but also of the marginalized people—the “harlequin eaters”—who consume it at this time when a global society is emerging. She reveals the imbrication of kitchen narratives and intellectual–aesthetic practices of thought and art, presenting a way to integrate socioeconomic history with the history of literature and the visual arts. The Harlequin Eaters also offers fascinating background to today’s problems of food inequity as it unpacks stories of the for-profit recycling of excess food across class and race divisions.

Sounds As They Are

Sounds As They Are
Author: Richard Beaudoin
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 297
Release: 2024
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0197659284

In Sounds as They Are, author Richard Beaudoin recognizes the often-overlooked sounds made by the bodies of performers and their recording equipment as music and analyzes these sounds using a bold new theory of inclusive track analysis (ITA). In doing so, he demonstrates new expressive, interpretive, and embodied possibilities and also uncovers insidious inequalities across music studies and the recording industry, including the silencing of certain sounds along lines of gender and race.