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Showing 1 - 25 of
34 matches in All Departments
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Ainu Grammar (Hardcover)
Basil Hall Chamberlain, John Batchelor
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R812
Discovery Miles 8 120
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This substantial collection of new includes contributions from
leading international Shakespeare scholars such as Tom Craik,
Philip Edwards, Inga-Stina Ewbank, R.A. Foakes, G.K. Hunter,
Kenneth Muir, A.D. Nuttall, Brian Vickers and Stanley Wells. The
book's twenty five essays range over the whole field of Shakespeare
studies and deal especially with Shakespeare and his predecessors,
Shakespeare and his contemporaries, Shakespeare in performance
(including film) and Shakespeare in relation to later literature.
Shakespearean Continuities is published in honour of the
distinguished Shakespeare scholar E.A.J. Honigmann, FBA, Joseph
Cowen Professor of English Literature at the University of
Newcastle, 1970-1989.
Published in 1900, Conrad's Lord Jim can in many ways be seen as
the first 'modern' novel. This important full study of the book,
originally published in 1988, emphasizes the outstanding historical
and artistic significance of Conrad's masterpiece. John Batchelor
pursues the ways in which Conrad dramatizes with unprecedented
fidelity a relationship between friends and also explores what for
Conrad is clearly a central truth about the human condition, namely
the inalienable loneliness of man. The book provides a full
discussion of the biographical and literary contexts of the novel,
making use of the original manuscript and tracing the literary
influences and sources of Conrad's writing. It also considers the
novel's technical innovations, including Conrad's 'impressionism'
and its method of dramatization. Further chapters are devoted to a
detailed commentary on the text and the book concludes with a study
of the novel's critical reception since its first publication. This
volume will be essential reading for all students of literature and
particularly for those with an interest in Conrad's place in the
development of modern fiction.
Published in 1900, Conrad's Lord Jim can in many ways be seen as
the first 'modern' novel. This important full study of the book,
originally published in 1988, emphasizes the outstanding historical
and artistic significance of Conrad's masterpiece. John Batchelor
pursues the ways in which Conrad dramatizes with unprecedented
fidelity a relationship between friends and also explores what for
Conrad is clearly a central truth about the human condition, namely
the inalienable loneliness of man. The book provides a full
discussion of the biographical and literary contexts of the novel,
making use of the original manuscript and tracing the literary
influences and sources of Conrad's writing. It also considers the
novel's technical innovations, including Conrad's 'impressionism'
and its method of dramatization. Further chapters are devoted to a
detailed commentary on the text and the book concludes with a study
of the novel's critical reception since its first publication. This
volume will be essential reading for all students of literature and
particularly for those with an interest in Conrad's place in the
development of modern fiction.
Is literary biography so widely read for popular, "prurient"
reasons, or for reputable intellectual reasons? Is it of interest
only in so far as it illuminates a writer's work? How much can we
know about a life, such as Shakespeare's, where the documentation
is so slight? These are among the wide range of questions addressed
by the seventeen leading biographers and literary critics in this
important new work.
Always a popular genre, biography has become one of the most
immediate and accessible modes of writing about literature. This
book examines such literary figures as Conrad, Lawrence, Huxley,
Virginia Woolf, and the poets Elizabeth Bishop and Lord Rochester,
while addressing the nature and form of literary biography--the
concept of biography as autobiography, the problems the genre
poses, the necessity of the ignorance of a biographer, and the
literary biographer at work. The distinguished contributors include
Anthony Storr, Lyndall Gordon, Richard Holmes, Jon Stallworthy,
Hermione Lee, David Bradshaw, and Ann Thwaite.
This substantial collection includes contributions from leading
international Shakespeare scholars such as Tom Craik, Philip
Edwards, IngA-Stina Ewbank, R.A. Foakes, G.K. Hunter, Kenneth Muir,
A.D. Nuttall, Brian Vickers and Stanley Wells. The book's twenty
five essays range over the whole field of Shakespeare studies and
deal especially with Shakespeare and his predecessors, Shakespeare
and his contemporaries, Shakespeare in performance (including film)
and Shakespeare in relation to later literature. Shakespearean
Continuities is published in honour of the distinguished
Shakespeare scholar E.A.J. Honigmann, FBA, Joseph Cowen Professor
of English Literature at the University of Newcastle, 1970-1989.
H. G. Wells wrote almost a hundred books, yet he is generally
remembered for only a handful of them. He is known above all as a
writer who heralded the future, yet throughout his life he clung to
fixed attitudes from the Victorian past. He began his career as a
draper's apprentice; by the age of forty-five he had secured an
international reputation as the author of The Time Machine, The War
of the Worlds, Kipps and Tono Bungay; he went on to establish
himself as an influential educator, polemicist and sage. In this
book John Batchelor offers a readable introduction to Wells's huge
and varied output as a writer and thinker. He guides the reader
through the whole oeuvre, and argues persuasively that at his best
Wells was a great artist: a man with a remarkable, restless
imagination (not limited, as many critics have implied, merely to
his early romances) and with a coherent and responsible theory of
fiction.
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Ainu Grammar (Paperback)
Basil Hall Chamberlain, John Batchelor
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R505
Discovery Miles 5 050
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Ainu people of Japan are very little known and where treated as
savages when discovered by western travellers. Their religion was
rich and cultured and this book opens the eyes of the reader to a
culture that so few people know of. Many of the earliest books,
particularly those dating back to the 1900's and before, are now
extremely scarce and increasingly expensive. We are republishing
these classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions,
using the original text and artwork.
A fascinating, richly illustrated exploration of the poignant
origins of Rudyard Kipling's world-famous children's classic "In
this concise and remarkable book . . . Batchelor guides us expertly
. . . drawing on multiple sources and making intriguing connections
between Kipling's stories for children and for adults."-John Carey,
The Sunday Times From "How the Leopard Got Its Spots" to "The
Elephant's Child," Rudyard Kipling's Just So Stories have delighted
readers across the world for more than a century. In this original
study, John Batchelor explores the artistry with which Kipling
created the Just So Stories, using each tale as an entry point into
the writer's life and work-including the tragedy that shadows much
of the volume, the death of his daughter Josephine. Batchelor
details the playful challenges the stories made to contemporary
society. In his stories Kipling played with biblical and other
stories of creation and imagined fantastical tales of animals'
development and man's discovery of literacy. Richly illustrated
with original drawings and family photographs, this account reveals
Kipling's public and private lives-and sheds new light on a
much-loved and tremendously influential classic.
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