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Herland (Paperback)
Charlotte Perkins Gilman; Introduction by Alex Goody
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R213
R175
Discovery Miles 1 750
Save R38 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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A lost-world fantasy in the tradition of Arthur Conan Doyle and the
Utopianism of William Morris, Herland inverted expectations with
its exclusively female society visited by three men from the
Edwardian era. An early example of feminist science fiction, this
utopian fantasy explores miracle births, role reversals and
concepts of peace and freedom. Flame Tree 451 presents a new
series, The Foundations of Feminist Fiction. The early 1900s saw a
quiet revolution in literature previously dominated by male
adventure heroes. Both men and women moved beyond the norms of the
male gaze to write from a different gender perspective, sometimes
with female protagonists, but also expressing the universal freedom
to write on any subject whatsoever. Each book features a brand new
biography and a glossary of literary terms.
Modernist Poetry, Gender and Leisure Technologies: Machine
Amusements explores how modernist women poets were inspired by
leisure technologies to write new versions of the gendered subject.
Focusing on American women writers and particularly on the city of
New York, the book argues that the poetry of modernist women that
engages with, examines or critiques the new leisure technologies of
their era is fundamentally changed by the encounter with that
technology. The chapters in the book focus on shopping,
advertising, dance, film, radio and phonography, on city spaces
such as Coney Island, Greenwich Village and Harlem, and on poetry
that embraces the linguistic and formal innovations of modernism
whilst paying close attention to the embodied politics of gender.
The technologized city, and the leisure cultures and media forms
emerging from it, enabled modernist women writers to re-imagine
forms of lyric embodiment, inspired by the impact of technology on
modern ideas of selfhood and subjectivity.
Reading Westworld is the first volume to explore the cultural,
textual and theoretical significance of the hugely successful HBO
TV series Westworld. The essays engage in a series of original
enquiries into the central themes of the series including
conceptions of the human and posthuman, American history, gaming,
memory, surveillance, AI, feminism, imperialism, free will and
contemporary capitalism. In its varied critical engagements with
the genre, narratives and contexts of Westworld, this volume
explores the show's wider and deeper meanings and the questions it
poses, as well considering how Westworld reflects on the ethical
implications of artificial life and technological innovation for
our own futurity. With critical essays that draw on the
interdisciplinary strengths and productive intersections of media,
cultural and literary studies, Reading Westworld seeks to respond
to the show's fundamental question; "Have you ever questioned the
nature of your reality?" It will be of interest to students,
academics and general readers seeking to engage with Westworld and
the far-reaching questions it poses about our current engagements
with technology.
The intersection of modernist studies and critical animal studies
is a new, progressive field that raises crucial questions about
what it means to live with animals in modernity. Beastly Modernisms
gathers essays from leading figures in the field alongside emerging
scholars who, together, revisit canonical figures and decentre the
canons and geographies of modernism. Grounded in interdisciplinary
approaches, the contributions work with cultural history and
theoretical frameworks to unearth the multispecies dynamics of
twentieth-century literature and culture. The chapters in Beastly
Modernisms present a diverse range of approaches and topics,
exploring dogs in Virginia Woolf to Republican China, animals and
gender in surrealism to African-American texts, Sami reindeer to
rat propaganda, modernist jellyfish to metamodernist beasts, 1940s
poetry to Indian Partition stories, charting the current and future
state of modernist animal studies.
Though modernism's emergence in an environment of techno-cultural
acceleration has long been recognized, recent scholarship has
deepened and challenged our understanding of the connections
between twentieth-century cultural production and its technological
interlocutors. In twenty-eight chapters by leading academics, The
Edinburgh Companion to Modernism and Technology re-examines the
machines and media that functioned as modernism's contexts and
competitors. Grounded in an interdisciplinary approach informed by
the theoretical and socio-historical frames of current teaching and
research on modernism and technology, this research volume makes a
crucial and timely intervention in the field of modernist studies.
The scholarly contributions on machines that govern transport,
production, and public utilities, on media and communication
technologies, on the intersections of technology with the human
body, and on the technological systems of the early twentieth
century capture the contemporary state of modernist technology
studies and chart the future directions of this vibrant area.
Modernist Poetry, Gender and Leisure Technologies: Machine
Amusements explores how modernist women poets were inspired by
leisure technologies to write new versions of the gendered subject.
Focusing on American women writers and particularly on the city of
New York, the book argues that the poetry of modernist women that
engages with, examines or critiques the new leisure technologies of
their era is fundamentally changed by the encounter with that
technology. The chapters in the book focus on shopping,
advertising, dance, film, radio and phonography, on city spaces
such as Coney Island, Greenwich Village and Harlem, and on poetry
that embraces the linguistic and formal innovations of modernism
whilst paying close attention to the embodied politics of gender.
The technologized city, and the leisure cultures and media forms
emerging from it, enabled modernist women writers to re-imagine
forms of lyric embodiment, inspired by the impact of technology on
modern ideas of selfhood and subjectivity.
Encompassing writers from Edith Wharton, Ezra Pound and T.S. Eliot
to Willa Cather, Theodore Dreiser and Gertrude Stein, American
Modernism: Cultural Transactions is a comprehensive and informative
companion to the field of American literary modernism. This
groundbreaking new book explores the changing patterns of American
literary culture in the early years of the 20th century, in the
aftermath of the great American Renaissance, when the United States
was well on its way to becoming the most economically powerful and
culturally influential nation in the world. It brings together some
of the most eminent British and European scholars to investigate
how the United States's unique cultural position is in fact the
by-product of a range of cultural transactions between the United
States and Europe, between the visual and the literary arts, and
between the economic and aesthetic worlds. And it presents a
stunning re-examination of the social, cultural and artistic
contours of American modernism, from the impact of a liberal
Scottish speaker on T.S. Eliot's considerations of Shakespeare to
the generic hybridity of Edith Wharton's writing, from the
influence of Oscar Wilde on Hart Crane to the effect of
Anglo-European experimentalism on Native American fiction - and
much more. Through close textual and archival analysis, backed up
with compelling historical insights, these nine new essays explore
the nature and limits of American modernism. They address such
topical issues as geomodernism, transnationalism and the nature of
American identity; they examine the ways writers embraced or
rejected the emerging modern world; and they take a fresh look at
American literature in the broad context of international
modernism.
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