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Books > Language & Literature > Literature: texts > General
This ground-breaking anthology brings together 38 short stories
culled from over a century of writing by Muslim women from colonial
and postcolonial India. Selected from different Indian languages,
it includes fascinating stories by celebrated and emerging authors.
It also excavates stories from early women's journals such as
Tehzeeb-e-Niswan, Saogat, and Indian Ladies' Magazine. Written in
different styles, modes, and forms, the stories deconstruct
cultural essentialism often involved in imagining Muslim womanhood
and reflect upon the diversity of imagined and lived experiences.
They challenge sundry labels, explore intersections of identities,
debunk several myths, and demonstrate how the authors navigate the
world of voices and silences. Ranging from imaginary geographies to
topographies of Muslim ghettos, most of these powerful stories
narrate the spaces that Muslim women inhabit, and delineate their
courage, desires, freedom, struggle, and myriad subjectivities.
Now thoroughly revamped with a diverse selection of poetic voices
from the last fifty years, this third edition of Rhian Williams's
bestselling book, The Poetry Toolkit guides readers through key
terms, genres and concepts that help them to develop a richer, more
sophisticated approach to reading, thinking and writing about
poetry. Combining an easy-to-use reference format with in-depth
practice readings and further exercises, the book helps students
master the study of poetry for themselves. As well as featuring
more contemporary voices, the 3rd edition of The Poetry Toolkit
includes an expanded practical section giving guidance on close
reading, comparative reading and advice on writing critically about
poetry. In addition, the book is accompanied by a companion website
offering audio recordings of poetry readings, weblinks and
overviews of key theoretical approaches to support advanced study.
Head to bloomsbury.com/Williams-the-poetry-toolkit for a host of
additional resources.
The first extended Lacanian reading of J. L. Austin's ordinary
language philosophy, this book examines how it has been received in
the continental tradition by Jacques Derrida and Judith Butler,
Jacques Ranciere and Oswald Ducrot. This is a tradition that
neglects Austin's general speech act theory on behalf of his
special theory of the performative, whilst bringing a new attention
to the literary and the aesthetic. The book charts each of these
theoretical interactions with a Lacanian reading of the thinker
through a case study. Austin, Derrida and Butler are respectively
read with a Hollywood blockbuster, a Shakespearean bestseller and a
globally influential May '68 poster - texts preoccupied with the
problem of subjectivity in early, high and postmodernity. Hence
Austin's constatives (nonperformative statements) are explored with
Dead Poets Society; Derridean naming with Romeo and Juliet; and
Butlerian aesthetic re-enactment with We Are all German Jews.
Finally, Ranciere and Ducrot enable a return to Austin beyond his
continental reception. Austin is valorised with a theory as
attractive, and as irreducible, to the continental tradition as his
own thought, namely Jacques Lacan's theory of the signifier.
Drawing together some of the giants of language theory,
psychoanalysis and poststructuralist thought, Habjan offers a new
materialist reading of the 'ordinary' status of literary language
and a vital contribution to current debates within literary studies
and contemporary philosophy.
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Paperback
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