More Books

More Books
Author: Boston Public Library
Publisher:
Total Pages: 398
Release: 1926
Genre: Bibliography
ISBN:

Genesis

Genesis
Author: T. J. Reed
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Total Pages: 315
Release: 2020
Genre: Authorship
ISBN: 1640140824

Illuminates how selected great works of literature arose, leading to deepened understanding of the works and harking back to what we still call the humanities.

Sympathy in Transformation

Sympathy in Transformation
Author: Roman Alexander Barton
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2018-10-08
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 3110516411

There is little doubt that sympathy plays a pivotal role in aesthetic as well as moral experience, yet also little agreement on how to describe this connection and its long history. This volume investigates the changes in the concept of sympathy as well as its rhetorical, poetical and ethical functions from antiquity to the threshold of Romanticism. The focus is on sympathy's development from a cosmological principle expressing the coherence, correspondence, and unity of all things into a theoretical key concept of intersubjectivity informing moral philosophy, criticism and literature. Thus, Sympathy in Transformation offers important insights into the many ways in which, when sympathy migrates into diverse discourses in Early Modernity, its ancient origins dwindle out of sight, while some of its central elements re-emerge in a surprising manner.

The Arts of Empire

The Arts of Empire
Author: Walter S. H. Lim
Publisher: University of Delaware Press
Total Pages: 292
Release: 1998
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780874136418

This book focuses its reading of the poetics and politics of colonial expansion in Renaissance England on the lives and writings of such diverse figures as Sir Walter Ralegh, John Donne, Richard Hakluyt, Samuel Purchas, William Shakespeare, Edmund Spenser, and John Milton. It studies a wide range of texts, including The Discoverie of Guiana, Virginia's Verger, Othello, The Faerie Queene, A View of the Present State of Ireland, Paradise Lost, and Paradise Regained. It also examines the inscription in these writings of themes, motifs, and tropes frequently found in colonial texts: the land as desiring female body and object of desire; the masculinist gaze responding to the exotic; and the experience of the thrilling sensations of wonder.

Native Tongues

Native Tongues
Author: Sean P. Harvey
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 349
Release: 2015-01-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 0674745388

Sean Harvey explores the morally entangled territory of language and race in this intellectual history of encounters between whites and Native Americans in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Misunderstandings about the differences between European and indigenous American languages strongly influenced whites’ beliefs about the descent and capabilities of Native Americans, he shows. These beliefs would play an important role in the subjugation of Native peoples as the United States pursued its “manifest destiny” of westward expansion. Over time, the attempts of whites to communicate with Indians gave rise to theories linking language and race. Scholars maintained that language was a key marker of racial ancestry, inspiring conjectures about the structure of Native American vocal organs and the grammatical organization and inheritability of their languages. A racially inflected discourse of “savage languages” entered the American mainstream and shaped attitudes toward Native Americans, fatefully so when it came to questions of Indian sovereignty and justifications of their forcible removal and confinement to reservations. By the mid-nineteenth century, scientific efforts were under way to record the sounds and translate the concepts of Native American languages and to classify them into families. New discoveries by ethnologists and philologists revealed a degree of cultural divergence among speakers of related languages that was incompatible with prevailing notions of race. It became clear that language and race were not essentially connected. Yet theories of a linguistically shaped “Indian mind” continued to inform the U.S. government’s efforts to extinguish Native languages for years to come.

Annual Report

Annual Report
Author: Boston Public Library
Publisher:
Total Pages: 86
Release: 1927
Genre:
ISBN:

37th report, 1889, has atlas of plates (35 cm.) illustrating new building.