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This book describes how young Black men on a disadvantaged housing
estate in London navigate the estate's expectations for their
behaviour as they operate within a street code that endorses
violence, knife-carrying and challenging masculinity. This street
code informs the men's masculine identities by promoting values of
misogyny, violence and the possession of expensive material objects
while subduing any performance or features deemed as weak or
feminine. Chapters detail the daily pressure on young men to gain
respect and perform the estate's street code while also providing
examples of young men who have escaped or rejected its influence.
King also outlines how youth workers can support those trapped by
the estate's street code by embodying personalised or caring
masculinity features that seek to transform the dominant
masculinity.
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Modern Art (Paperback)
J-.K. Huysmans; Translated by Brendan King
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R333
R292
Discovery Miles 2 920
Save R41 (12%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Marthe (Paperback)
J-.K. Huysmans; Translated by Brendan King
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R184
Discovery Miles 1 840
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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One of the first French novels to tackle the subject of
prostitution, this story centres on would-be actress Marthe who
lives in one of the lowest dives in Paris and her ultimately doomed
relationship with Leo, a romantic searching for something to take
place of lost illusions."
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La-Bas (Paperback)
J-.K. Huysmans; Translated by Brendan King
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R272
Discovery Miles 2 720
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Robert Baldick's Life of J.-K. Huysmans has become not just a
standard reference work, to be consulted as regularly as the
writing of the author whose life it chronicles, but a work of
literature in its own right. First published fifty years ago,
Baldick's classic biography presents a compelling narrative of
Huysmans' life and work in all its various phases - from the
Naturalism of the 1870s to the Decadence of the 1880s, and from the
occult vogue of the 1890s to the Catholic Revival of the turn of
the century - and it is written with such impeccable scholarship
that it is still relied on today as regards matters of fact and
detail. For this new edition - the first time the biography has
been reprinted in English -Baldick's notes have been extensively
revised and updated by Brendan King to take account of new
developments and publications in the field of Huysmansian studies.
First published in 1880, same year as Edgar Degas' "The Dancing
Lesson and Edouard Manet's solo show, these "Parisian Sketches
share the Impressionist fascination with the contemporary life of
Paris, the exuberant Paris of the Opera Garnier and the
Folies-Bergers. Like the striking images of the early
Impressionists, "Parisian Sketches is an assault on the visual
senses. Composed of a series of intense, meticulously observed
literary impressions--of cafe concerts and circus performers, of
streetwalkers and hot-chestnut sellers, of forgotten quarters in
the grimy, shiny 'City of Light'--"Parisian Sketches recreates
Paris with an intimacy and immediacy that confirms Huysmans as one
of the masters of 19th century French prose.
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Against Nature (Paperback)
J-.K. Huysmans; Translated by Brendan King
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R279
R246
Discovery Miles 2 460
Save R33 (12%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Against Nature is Huysmans's great fin-de-sicle novel anticipating
many strains of modernism in its appreciation of Baudelaire,
Moreau, Redon, Mallarm and Poe. A novel like no other, it features
a hero, des Esseintes, a neurasthenic aristocrat who has turned his
back on the vulgarity of modern life and retreated to an isolated
country villa. Here, accompanied only by two silent servants, he
pursues his obsessions with exotic flowers, rare gems, and complex
perfumes, embarking on a series of increasingly strange aesthetic
experiments, starting with the decision to give his giant pet
tortoise a jewel-encrusted shell.
J.-K. Huysmans' Stranded (En Rade 1887), published just three years
after the iconoclastic Against Nature, sees him again breaking new
ground and pushing back the boundaries of the novel form. Stamped
throughout with his characteristic black humour, Stranded is one of
Huysmans' most innovative, most imaginative works. Jacques' waking
reveries and daydreams are balanced by a succession of dreams and
nightmares that explore the seemingly irrational, often grotesque,
world of unconscious desire, producing a series of images that are
as unforgettable and unsettling as anything to be found in the
decadent fantasies of Against Nature, or the satanic obsessions of
L -bas.Hounded by creditors and gripped by a deep existential
gloom, Jacques Marles decides to flee Paris for the countryside,
hoping to find shelter from the financial storms raging around his
head, hoping to find peace. But Jacques soon discovers he cannot
escape the problems of modern city life by hiding in the country.
Stuck with his sick wife, Louise, in an abandoned ch teau that
seems to be rotting to pieces around them, Jacques waits for money
to arrive with nothing to do but give himself up to his
increasingly disturbing dreams
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