Pious Passion

Pious Passion
Author: Martin Riesebrodt
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 275
Release: 1998-06
Genre: History
ISBN: 0520074645

"For all who want to make sense of fundamentalism as a long-term consequence of the modern world, Pious Passion will be required reading. It is also enjoyable, abounding in cogent arguments set forth in lucid prose and supported by compelling examples."—Bruce B. Lawrence, author of Defenders of God "Riesebrodt's trenchant analysis brings the comparative study of religious activism to a new level of sophistication, exploring not only the ideological development of fundamentalist movements but also the changes in social structure that produced them. Pious Passion is a signal event in the modern social sciences, for it helps to establish a new academic field—the comparative study of fundamentalism."—Mark Juergensmeyer, author of The New Cold War?

Unity

Unity
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 446
Release: 1916
Genre: Liberalism (Religion)
ISBN:

Representing the Passions

Representing the Passions
Author: Richard Evan Meyer
Publisher: Getty Publications
Total Pages: 316
Release: 2003
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780892366767

Through an interlocking series of texts and images, this work explores how extreme sensations such as wonder, misery, ecstasy and rage have been portrayed at different moments in Western culture. Moving across multiple fields of creative endeavour and intellectual inquiry - from classical artefacts to Chicano art, political protest to operatic performance, Rene Descartes's writings on the soul to the Internet's digitised flesh - it reveals how the passions have elicited, eluded and transformed the act of representation.

Works

Works
Author: Samuel Johnson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 404
Release: 1820
Genre:
ISBN:

Samuel Johnson's Lives of the Poets

Samuel Johnson's Lives of the Poets
Author: Roger Lonsdale
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 2220
Release: 2006-02-16
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 0191515876

Johnson himself wrote in 1782: 'I know not that I have written any thing more generally commended than the Lives of the Poets'. Always recognized as a major biographical and critical achievement, Samuel Johnson's last literary project is also one of his most readable and entertaining, written with characteristic eloquence and conviction, and at times with combative trenchancy. Johnson's fifty-two biographies constitute a detailed survey of English poetry from the early seventeenth century down to his own time, with extended discussions of Cowley, Milton, Waller, Dryden, Addison, Prior, Swift, Pope, and Gray. The Lives also include Johnson's memorable biography of the enigmatic Richard Savage (1744), the friend of his own early years in London. Roger Lonsdale's Introduction describes the origins, composition, and textual history of the Lives, and assesses Johnson's assumptions and aims as biographer and critic. The commentary provides a detailed literary and historical context, investigating Johnson's sources, relating the Lives to his own earlier writings and conversation, and to the critical opinions of his contemporaries, as well as illustrating their early reception. This is the first scholarly edition since George Birkbeck Hill's three-volume Oxford edition (1905). This is volume two of four.