|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
Atlanta is the only American city to have been destroyed by fire as
an act of war, and it has its share of salacious stories. Wealthy
felons hosted elaborate parties inside the federal penitentiary.
Billionaire bootleggers and murderous rich boys practiced
corruption that reached all the way to the White House. Fast and
fearless drivers, complete with glamorous reputations and criminal
careers, gave rise to auto racing. Join author Laurel-Ann Dooley as
she navigates the underworld of Atlanta's past filled with
kidnapping, bribery, wives hiring hit men and all sorts of criminal
debauchery.
Discussion of site and buildings, books and manuscripts, cultural
life and traditions, from the earliest Anglo-Saxon period to the
later middle ages. Glastonbury Abbey was one of the great cultural
centres of Anglo-Saxon and medieval England, yet this is the first
volume of scholarly essays to be devoted to the subject. Written in
honour of C. A. Ralegh Radford, the first itemsare concerned with
the physical remains of the abbey, ranging from the place of
Glastonbury in the development of Christianity in Somerset to
specific examinations of surviving monastic buildings. The main
body of the essays explores documents relating to the abbey for
evidence of its history and traditions, including the earliest
Anglo-Saxon period, pre-conquest abbots, and links with the Celtic
world. The final section deals with the cultural life of the abbey:
Glastonbury's role in education is discussed and the concluding
essay deals with the most magical of all Glastonbury legends - its
link with Joseph of Arimathea and the Grail. Contributors: PHILIP
RAHTZ, MICHAEL D. COSTEN, C.J. BOND, J.B. WELLER, ROBERT W.
DUNNING, LESLEY ABRAMS, JAMES P. CARLEY, ANN DOOLEY, SARAH FOOT,
DAVID THORNTON, RICHARD SHARPE, JULIA CRICK, OLIVER J.PADEL,
MATTHEW BLOWS, CHARLES T. WOOD, NICHOLAS ORME,
CERIDWENLLOYD-MORGAN, FELICITY RIDDY.
"'Dear holy cleric,' they said, 'these old warriors tell you no
more than a third of their stories, because their memories are
faulty. Have these stories written down on poets' tablets in
refined language, so that the hearing of them will provide
entertainment for the lords and commons of later times.' The angels
then left them." Tales of the Elders of Ireland is the first
complete translation of the late Middle Irish Acallam na Senorach,
the largest literary text surviving from twelfth-century Ireland.
It contains the earliest and most comprehensive collection of
Fenian stories and poetry, intermingling the contemporary Christian
world of Saint Patrick, with his scribes, clerics, occasional
angels and souls rescued from Hell, the earlier pagan world of the
ancient, giant Fenians and Irish kings, and the parallel, timeless
Otherworld, peopled by ever-young, shape-shifting fairies. It also
provides the most extensive account available of the inhabitants of
the Irish Otherworld - their music and magic, their internecine
wars and their malice toward, and infatuation with, humankind -
themes still featured in the story-telling of present-day Ireland.
This readable and flowing new translation is based on existing
manuscript sources and is richly annotated, complete with an
Introduction discussing the place of the Acallam in Irish tradition
and the impact of the Fenian or Ossianic tradition on English and
European literature. ABOUT THE SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford
World's Classics has made available the widest range of literature
from around the globe. Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's
commitment to scholarship, providing the most accurate text plus a
wealth of other valuable features, including expert introductions
by leading authorities, helpful notes to clarify the text,
up-to-date bibliographies for further study, and much more.
A special number devoted to Celtic material. This special number of
the well-established series Arthurian Literature is devoted to
Celtic material. Contributions, from leading experts in Celtic
Studies, cover Welsh, Irish and Breton material, from medieval
texts to oral traditions surviving into modern times. The volume
reflects current trends and new approaches in this field whilst
also making available in English material hitherto inaccessible to
those with no reading knowledge of the Celticlanguages. CERIDWEN
LLOYD-MORGAN has published widely in the field of Arthurian
studies. She is currently Honorary Research Fellow in the School of
Welsh, Cardiff University.
In Playing the Hero, Ann Dooley examines the surviving manuscript
versions of the greatest of the early Irish sagas, the Tain Bo
Cuailnge (Cattle-Raid of Cooley), and creates a picture of the
cultural conditions and literary mind-sets under which medieval
scribes recreated the text. Dooley argues that the scribes' work is
both a transmission and a translation, and that their own changing
historical circumstances within the space of one hundred years,
from the beginning to the end of the twelfth century, determines
the specifics of their literary creativity. Playing the Hero is a
unique example of more contemporary literary methodologies -
post-structuralist, feminist, historicist and beyond - being used
to illuminate the Irish saga world. Dooley provides a commentary
for the saga, helping to re-animate its literary sophistication.
Her work is an interrogation of both the Irish epic hero - a
reading of the male through the medium of feminine discourse - and
the process whereby violence as normalized in the saga genre can be
recovered as problematic and troubling. Dooley's work is
groundbreaking and will provoke a wide response in Medieval Irish
studies.
|
|