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The Development of American Social Comedy from 1787 to 1936 (Hardcover): John Geoffrey Hartman The Development of American Social Comedy from 1787 to 1936 (Hardcover)
John Geoffrey Hartman
R2,430 Discovery Miles 24 300 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Concepts of Culture - Art, Politics, and Society (Paperback, Illustrated Ed): Adam Muller Concepts of Culture - Art, Politics, and Society (Paperback, Illustrated Ed)
Adam Muller; Edited by Adam Muller; Contributions by Martha Nussbaum, Rhonda Martens, Carl Matheson, …
R1,301 Discovery Miles 13 010 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

How do we define culture? To what uses should our concept of culture be put? What costs and benefits do these uses entail? Adam Muller brings together a diverse group of emerging and established scholars to probe the nature of the concept of culture while shedding light on its many different applications and contexts of use. In particular, they examine the assumed unity of culture and with arguments being made for and against over discussions of popular culture, film, globalization, sport, aesthetics, and human values. This volume brings together a variety of perspectives to add much-needed substance to our understanding of the history and politics of culture. Rigorous and interdisciplinary, Concepts of Culture secures a place for analytic philosophy, humanism, and liberal political theory in the ongoing discussion of exactly what culture is and how culture works.

The Geoffrey Hartman Reader (Paperback, New): Geoffrey Hartman, Daniel T. O'Hara The Geoffrey Hartman Reader (Paperback, New)
Geoffrey Hartman, Daniel T. O'Hara
R1,507 Discovery Miles 15 070 Out of stock

Geoffrey Hartman is a pivotal figure in twentieth-century literary thinking, especially in literary theory and its transformation into such fields as Holocaust studies, trauma studies, and work on witnessing and testimony. The essays in this reader, preceded by an important autobiographical introduction, present the full range of Hartman's interests, which cover almost the entire field of contemporary literature and culture-from poetry through psychoanalysis and trauma studies to midrash and the media revolution. Throughout his career, starting with his earliest books on Romantic literature, Hartman has interrogated the possibility of a healing culture of vision, one that could travel from one civilization to another and could satisfy safely rather than exacerbate self-destructively the repetitive human drive to reverse time and exact apocalyptic vengeance.

A Scholar's Tale - Intellectual Journey of a Displaced Child of Europe (Paperback): Geoffrey Hartman A Scholar's Tale - Intellectual Journey of a Displaced Child of Europe (Paperback)
Geoffrey Hartman
R736 Discovery Miles 7 360 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

For more than fifty years, Geoffrey Hartman has been a pivotal figure in the humanities. In his first book, in 1954, he helped establish the study of Romanticism as key to the problems of modernity. Later, his writings were crucial to the explosive developments in literary theory in the late seventies, and he was a pioneer in Jewish studies, trauma studies, and studies of the Holocaust. At Yale, he was a founder of its Judaic Studies program, as well as of the first major video archive for Holocaust testimonies.Generations of students have benefited from Hartman's generosity, his penetrating and incisive questioning, the wizardry of his close reading, and his sense that the work of a literary scholar, no less than that of an artist, is a creative act. All these qualities shine forth in this intellectual memoir, which will stand as his autobiography. Hartman describes his early education, uncanny sense of vocation, and development as a literary scholar and cultural critic. He looks back at how his career was influenced by his experience, at the age of nine, of being a refugee from Nazi Germany in the Kindertransport. He spent the next six years at school in England, where he developed his love of English literature and the English countryside, before leaving to join his mother in America.Hartman treats us to a biobibliographyof his engagements with the major trends in literary criticism. He covers the exciting period at Yale handled so controversially by the media and gives us vivid portraits, in particular, of Harold Bloom, Paul de Man, and Jacques Derrida.SEND GEOFFREY COVER COPY All this is set in the context of his gradual self-awareness of what scholarship implies and how his personal displacements strengthened his calling to mediate between European and American literary cultures. Anyone looking for a rich, intelligible account of the last half-century of combative literary studies will want to read Geoffrey Hartman's unapologetic scholar's tale.

The Third Pillar - Essays in Judaic Studies (Hardcover): Geoffrey Hartman The Third Pillar - Essays in Judaic Studies (Hardcover)
Geoffrey Hartman
R1,566 Discovery Miles 15 660 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Why should we be excluded from the history and literature of Judaism because the world of our fathers and mothers became a secularized one, Geoffrey Hartman asks, or because religious literacy, whatever our faith or community affiliation, has gone into relative decline? And why, he asks, do those who have no trouble finding pleasure and intellectual profit in the Greek and Roman classics or in the literary and artistic productions of two millennia of Western Christianity not easily find equal resonance and reward in the major texts in the Jewish tradition? For if Christianity and the classical inheritance stand as two pillars of Western civilization, surely the third pillar is the Jewish tradition.In "The Third Pillar" Hartman, one of the most influential scholars and teachers of English and comparative literature of recent decades, has brought together some of the most important and eloquent essays he has written since the 1980s on the major texts of the Jewish tradition. In three groupings, on Bible, Midrash, and education, Hartman clarifies the relevance of contemporary literary criticism to canonical texts in the tradition, while demonstrating what has been--and what still remains to be--learned from the Midrash to enrich the interpretation of commentary and art, sacred or secular. "The map of the discipline of Jewish studies] is still being drawn," Hartman writes. "Barely known areas tempt the explorer, and major reinterpretations remain possible. This third pillar of our civilization . . . is only now being fully excavated: we have discovered something but not everything about its structure and upholding function."

The Eighth Day - Poems Old and New (Hardcover): Geoffrey Hartman The Eighth Day - Poems Old and New (Hardcover)
Geoffrey Hartman
R749 Discovery Miles 7 490 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Geoffrey Hartman is best known as one of the most eminent literary scholars and theorists of the past half century, going back to his first book, "The Unmediated Vision" (1954). His book on Wordsworth, published ten years later, remains a standard work, perhaps the single most searching study of Wordsworth's poetry to appear in the twentieth century. That Hartman has also written and published poetry is not so widely known, previously publishing two small volumes, "Akiba's Children" (1978) and "The Bible in Italy" (2004). These works represents a hidden, more personal side of this major literary figure. They show him engaging with Judaism and the Bible in ways that surfaced only much later in his critical prose. Through his poetry Hartman has been able to express more fully and imaginatively his thoughts about life, religion, and poetry itself. "The Eighth Day" combines never-before-seen poems with most of those of his previous two volumes. Altogether, these poems reveal a facet of Hartman's work that students and scholars of poetry will find most illuminating.

The Development of American Social Comedy from 1787 to 1936 (Paperback): John Geoffrey Hartman The Development of American Social Comedy from 1787 to 1936 (Paperback)
John Geoffrey Hartman
R716 Discovery Miles 7 160 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Scars of the Spirit - The Struggle Against Inauthenticity (Paperback, First): Geoffrey Hartman Scars of the Spirit - The Struggle Against Inauthenticity (Paperback, First)
Geoffrey Hartman
R620 R514 Discovery Miles 5 140 Save R106 (17%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

In this fascinating collection of essays, noted cultural critic Geoffrey Hartman raises the essential question of where we can find the real or authentic in today's world, and how this affects the way we can understand our human predicament. Hartman explores such issues as the fantasy of total and perfect information available on the Internet, the biographical excesses of tell-all daytime talk shows, and how we can understand what is "true" in biographical and testimonial writing. And, what, he asks, is the ethical point of all this personal testimony? What has it really taught us? Underlying the entire book is a question of how the Holocaust has shaped the possibilities for truth and for the writing of an authentic life story in today's world, and how we can approach the world in a meaningful way. Hartman produces a meditation on how an appreciation of the aesthetic qualities of art and writing may help us to answer these questions of meaning.

After Representation? - The Holocaust, Literature, and Culture (Hardcover): R. Clifton Spargo, Robert Ehrenreich After Representation? - The Holocaust, Literature, and Culture (Hardcover)
R. Clifton Spargo, Robert Ehrenreich; Introduction by R. Clifton Spargo; Contributions by Michael Rothberg, Erin McGlothlin, …
R1,792 Discovery Miles 17 920 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

After Representation? explores one of the major issues in Holocaust studiesùthe intersection of memory and ethics in artistic expression, particularly within literature.As experts in the study of literature and culture, the scholars in this collection examine the shifting cultural contexts for Holocaust representation and reveal how writersùwhether they write as witnesses to the Holocaust or at an imaginative distance from the Nazi genocideùarticulate the shadowy borderline between fact and fiction, between event and expression, and between the condition of life endured in atrocity and the hope of a meaningful existence. What imaginative literature brings to the study of the Holocaust is an ability to test the limits of language and its conventions. After Representation? moves beyond the suspicion of representation and explores the changing meaning of the Holocaust for different generations, audiences, and contexts.

Easy Pieces (Paperback, Revised): Geoffrey Hartman Easy Pieces (Paperback, Revised)
Geoffrey Hartman
R832 R751 Discovery Miles 7 510 Save R81 (10%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days
Wordsworth’s Poetry 1787-1814 (Paperback): Geoffrey Hartman Wordsworth’s Poetry 1787-1814 (Paperback)
Geoffrey Hartman
R1,713 Discovery Miles 17 130 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The drama of consciousness and maturation in the growth of a poet's mind is traced from Wordsworth's earliest poems to The Excursion of 1814. Mr. Hartman follows Wordsworth's growth into self-consciousness, his realization of the autonomy of the spirit, and his turning back to nature. The apocalyptic bias is brought out, perhaps for the first time since Bradley's Oxford Lectures, and without slighting in any way his greatness as a nature poet. Rather, a dialectical relation is established between his visionary temper and the slow and vacillating growth of the humanized or sympathetic imagination. Mr. Hartman presents a phenomenology of the mind with important bearings on the Romantic movement as a whole and as confirmation of Wordsworth's crucial position in the history of English poetry. Mr. Hartman is professor of English and comparative literature at the University of Iowa. "A most distinguished book, subtle, penetrating, profound."—Rene Wellek. "If it is the purpose of criticism to illuminate, to evaluate, and to send the reader back to the text for a fresh reading, Hartman has succeeded in establishing the grounds for such a renewal of appreciation of Wordsworth."—Donald Weeks, Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism.

The Fateful Question of Culture (Paperback, Revised): Geoffrey Hartman The Fateful Question of Culture (Paperback, Revised)
Geoffrey Hartman
R721 Discovery Miles 7 210 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

One of our most incisive critics asks where the assault against the canons of Western culture has led us. Engaging a wide range of literature and criticism, Hartman considers the term "culture" and its many uses, and calls for the restoration of literature to its place as the focus of thinking about culture and for the renewal of aesthetic education to help ensure the balance between art, culture, and politics.

Lost among the shouts and skirmishes of the "culture wars" is the very idea of culture itself.

In this illuminating book, one of our most distinguished critics and scholars asks what the assault against the canons of Western culture has left in its place. If art and literature are largely the products of ideology and interest, how do they matter? And what does the idea of culture mean in today's sprawling, fragmented, critical world where everything -poetry or pornography- gets "read" in the same way?

Engaging an extraordinary range of literature, philosophy, social criticism, and popular culture, Geoffrey Hartman probes the meanings and uses of culture in contemporary society. The triumph of cultural studies -and its critiques of bourgeois Eurocentric tradition- is largely complete, Hartman writes. Against the political appropriation of culture, he posits, instead, a definition of culture as public conversation, intellectual and social debate among diverse communities. And against reactionary pressures to impose -or reinstate- a singular culture, or to seek in art or literature an affirmation of group identity, Hartman sketches new roles for human imagination in a postmodern world.

For Hartman, the fusion of culture and politics, of whatever ideology, is disastrous. At a time of abstraction, fragmentation, and alienation, art and literature offer wholeness and meaning. But the promise is frought with danger, Hartman argues, in a provocative discussion of the uses of culture as exemplified in the Romantic legacy. He pays special attention to literature's role in reconnecting us to the world. The choice is ours: Wordsworth or Heidegger, literature as shared experience or as reactionary ideology.

Hartman ranges widely in these elegant pages. He confronts the shock to the universalistic sense of culture from the Holocaust, as well as the problematic responses of such critic as Adorno and Derrida; explores the poetry of Wordsworth both as a diagnostic and a counter-model to the desensitization of modern life; and addresses the impact of politics of inclusion and diversity on the claims of high culture.

Perhaps Hartman's most publicly engaged book, "The Fateful Question of Culture" embraces both the masterworks of European literature and art and the signs and symbols of popular media and daily life. It is a powerful reaffirmation of the liberating discourses that have always been at the very center of the Western tradition.

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