Anna Karenina

Anna Karenina
Author: Leo Tolstoy
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 1234
Release: 2010-10-19
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1439169462

A fresh, practical approach to Leo Tolstoy's enduring classic,Anna Karenina,considered one of the greatest novels ever written.

Our Mutual Friend

Our Mutual Friend
Author: Charles Dickens
Publisher: IndyPublish.com
Total Pages: 456
Release: 2004-11
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781414217192

Curiosities and Texts

Curiosities and Texts
Author: Marjorie Swann
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2010-11-24
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0812203178

A craze for collecting swept England during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Aristocrats and middling-sort men alike crammed their homes full of a bewildering variety of physical objects: antique coins, scientific instruments, minerals, mummified corpses, zoological specimens, plants, ethnographic objects from Asia and the Americas, statues, portraits. Why were these bizarre jumbles of artifacts so popular? In Curiosities and Texts, Marjorie Swann demonstrates that collections of physical objects were central to early modern English literature and culture. Swann examines the famous collection of rarities assembled by the Tradescant family; the development of English natural history; narrative catalogs of English landscape features that began to appear in the Tudor and Stuart periods; the writings of Ben Jonson and Robert Herrick; and the foundation of the British Museum. Through this wide-ranging series of case studies, Swann addresses two important questions: How was the collection, which was understood as a form of cultural capital, appropriated in early modern England to construct new social selves and modes of subjectivity? And how did literary texts—both as material objects and as vehicles of representation—participate in the process of negotiating the cultural significance of collectors and collecting? Crafting her unique argument with a balance of detail and insight, Swann sheds new light on material culture's relationship to literature, social authority, and personal identity.