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(Artist Transcriptions). Matching note-for-note piano
transcriptions to the album of the same name featuring Peterson's
interpretations of 12 Sinatra standards. Includes: All of Me * The
Birth of the Blues * Come Dance with Me * How About You? * I Get a
Kick Out of You * It Happened in Monterey * Just in Time * Learnin'
the Blues * Saturday Night (Is the Loneliest Night of the Week) *
(Love Is) The Tender Trap * Witchcraft * You Make Me Feel So Young.
New, wide-ranging essays on the controversial poet, who was both a
harbinger of Modernism and a critic of modernity. Stefan George
(1868-1933) is along with Hugo von Hofmannsthal and Rainer Maria
Rilke one of the pre-eminent German poets of the twentieth century.
He also had an important, albeit controversial and provocative role
in German cultural history. It is generally agreed that he played a
significant part in the transition of German literature to
Modernism, particularly in poetry. At the same time he was an
outspoken critic of modernity. He believed that only
anall-encompassing cultural renewal could save modern man. Although
George is often linked with the l'art pour l'art movement, and
although his artistic consciousness was formed by European
aestheticism, his poetry and the writings that emerged from the
poets and intellectuals he gathered around him in the George Circle
are above all a scathing commentary on the political, social, and
cultural situation in Germany at the turn of the century. George,
who was imbued with the idea of the poet as a prophet and priest,
saw himself as the Messiah of a New Hellenism and a New Reich led
by an intellectual and aesthetic elite consisting of men who were
bonded together through their allegiance to a charismatic leader.
Some of the values that George proclaimed, among them a
glorification of power, of heroism and self-sacrifice, were seized
upon by the National Socialists, and subsequently his writings
andthose of his circle were considered by some to be proto-fascist.
It did not help his reputation that after the Second World War much
of the criticism of his works was practiced by uncritical,
hagiographic George worshippers. In recent years, however, there
has been a renewed and unbiased interest among scholars and critics
in George and his circle. The wide-ranging and original essays in
this volume explore anew George's poetry and his contribution to
Modernism, the relation between his vision of a New Reich and
fascist ideology, and his importance as a cultural critic. Jens
Rieckmann is Professor of German at the University of California,
Irvine.
Concealed in rows of carefully restored volumes in rare book
libraries is a history of the patterns of book collecting and
compilation that shaped the literature of the English Renaissance.
In this early period of print, before the introduction of
commercial binding, most published literary texts did not stand on
shelves in discrete, standardized units. They were issued in loose
sheets or temporarily stitched-leaving it to the purchaser or
retailer to collect, configure, and bind them. In Bound to Read,
Jeffrey Todd Knight excavates this culture of compilation-of
binding and mixing texts, authors, and genres into single
volumes-and sheds light on a practice that not only was pervasive
but also defined the period's very ways of writing and thinking.
Through a combination of archival research and literary criticism,
Knight shows how Renaissance conceptions of imaginative writing
were inextricable from the material assembly of texts. While
scholars have long identified an early modern tendency to borrow
and redeploy texts, Bound to Read reveals that these strategies of
imitation and appropriation were rooted in concrete ways of
engaging with books. Knight uncovers surprising juxtapositions such
as handwritten sonnets collected with established poetry in print
and literary masterpieces bound with liturgical texts and
pamphlets. By examining works by Shakespeare, Spenser, Montaigne,
and others, he dispels the notion of literary texts as static or
closed, and instead demonstrates how the unsettled conventions of
early print culture fostered an idea of books as interactive and
malleable. Though firmly rooted in Renaissance culture, Knight's
carefully calibrated arguments also push forward to the digital
present-engaging with the modern library archives where these works
were rebound and remade, and showing how the custodianship of
literary artifacts shapes our canons, chronologies, and
contemporary interpretative practices.
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