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It is not always easy to maintain a proper balance between the
delineation of cultural development within a given literary field
and the claims of practical criticism. And yet if the history of
ideas is to be more than a pastime for the student of literature,
it must be rooted in the precise art of discrimination. The
following chapters attempt to describe and evaluate a particular
cultural development by relating the background of ideas to the
literary achievement of three writers. It will be sufficient here
to out line the nature of the problem, and the method and approach
employed. The concept of cultural development implies a recognition
of the con nections between ideology and aesthetics. There are at
least two ways of exploring such connections. The one, pioneered by
Basil Willey, seeks to situate the critical moments of our cultural
development in the back ground of ideas, without which the
contribution of a particular author cannot be justly evaluated. The
danger of such an approach is that the task of discrimination comes
to depend over-heavily on extra-literary criteria."
It has recently been argued that the 18th century can no longer be
1 seen as gripped in the strait-jacket of Augustanism and
Neoclassicism. Such labels are seen as doing less than justice to
the rich variety of individual talents and intellectual trends
which collectively constitute 18th century culture. While welcoming
the interment of the long standing myth of the peace of the
Augustans, there seems little point in placing an interdict on
labels which, willy-nilly, have stuck. In economic, social and
ecclesiastical terms there is an age between 1689 and 1789 whose
homogeneity is reflected in its cultural products. There is a
mainstream which the strength and variety of counter currents and
cross-currents corroborate rather than disintegrate. It is the
purpose of this study to reveal some aspects of this mainstream by
examining certain cross-currents which overlap its edges. Hence the
choice of Thomas Ken (1637-1711), John Byrom (1692-1763) and
William Law (1686-1761)."
Six Steps to Preparing Exemplary Principals and Superintendents is
the first book to inspire and guide professors and program
administrator's proven ways to prepare exemplary principals and
superintendents for schools. The authors review issues surrounding
extreme criticism of leadership education and counter with positive
new research and practices that clearly highlight successful
programs that link preparation to on-the-job successes of
graduates. The reader will find a step-by-step guide to selecting
the best students, creating a pre- and post-assessment of student
learning, a well-designed procedure to pretest and assure that all
masters degree students actually acquire a strong knowledge base
and score well on state licensure exams. The final step provides
proven questionnaires to survey graduates of the masters or
doctoral programs to gather valuable feedback for constant program
improvement and relevance to the real world of schools.
Six Steps to Preparing Exemplary Principals and Superintendents is
the first book to inspire and guide professors and program
administrator's proven ways to prepare exemplary principals and
superintendents for schools. The authors review issues surrounding
extreme criticism of leadership education and counter with positive
new research and practices that clearly highlight successful
programs that link preparation to on-the-job successes of
graduates. The reader will find a step-by-step guide to selecting
the best students, creating a pre- and post-assessment of student
learning, a well-designed procedure to pretest and assure that all
masters degree students actually acquire a strong knowledge base
and score well on state licensure exams. The final step provides
proven questionnaires to survey graduates of the masters or
doctoral programs to gather valuable feedback for constant program
improvement and relevance to the real world of schools.
Through case studies, practical activities, and common sense
explanations, this book shows that interpersonal sensitivity must
be developed if a school is going to succeed.
It has recently been argued that the 18th century can no longer be
1 seen as gripped in the strait-jacket of Augustanism and
Neoclassicism. Such labels are seen as doing less than justice to
the rich variety of individual talents and intellectual trends
which collectively constitute 18th century culture. While welcoming
the interment of the long standing myth of the peace of the
Augustans, there seems little point in placing an interdict on
labels which, willy-nilly, have stuck. In economic, social and
ecclesiastical terms there is an age between 1689 and 1789 whose
homogeneity is reflected in its cultural products. There is a
mainstream which the strength and variety of counter currents and
cross-currents corroborate rather than disintegrate. It is the
purpose of this study to reveal some aspects of this mainstream by
examining certain cross-currents which overlap its edges. Hence the
choice of Thomas Ken (1637-1711), John Byrom (1692-1763) and
William Law (1686-1761)."
It is not always easy to maintain a proper balance between the
delineation of cultural development within a given literary field
and the claims of practical criticism. And yet if the history of
ideas is to be more than a pastime for the student of literature,
it must be rooted in the precise art of discrimination. The
following chapters attempt to describe and evaluate a particular
cultural development by relating the background of ideas to the
literary achievement of three writers. It will be sufficient here
to out line the nature of the problem, and the method and approach
employed. The concept of cultural development implies a recognition
of the con nections between ideology and aesthetics. There are at
least two ways of exploring such connections. The one, pioneered by
Basil Willey, seeks to situate the critical moments of our cultural
development in the back ground of ideas, without which the
contribution of a particular author cannot be justly evaluated. The
danger of such an approach is that the task of discrimination comes
to depend over-heavily on extra-literary criteria."
Literature as sizzle marks the spirit of this book. And handouts as
pedagogic devices mark its form. In his life and work as a lecturer
in English Literature at Hull University, John Hoyles used the
handout as propaganda, student liberation, worker's control,
against the formalism of Cleanth Brook's well-wrought urn, and
against the managerialism of the questionnaire. John discovered the
handout as a democratic tool with the arrival of a new English
teacher at boarding school around 1953, with his dating and
practical criticism classes, which he later found out were the
products of a Leavisite mission to humanise the teaching of
literature. This foundation was refined with the first actual
lecture handouts issued by a Mr Broadbent on Milton in King's
College Cambridge 1961. The sizzle lasted a lifetime, through
John's first lectures on Dryden, through the Hull 1968 Sit In,
through the Essex Marxist conferences, to the later development
from teaching literature to teaching cinema. Let all the world in
every corner sing - and sizzle.
Here's a thing. How could John Donne, one of our greatest poets, be
equally, and often simultaneously, obsessed with those two radical
three-letter words and things, Sex and God? This book addresses the
whole of Donne's life and works, from the early Songs and Sonnets
to the late Sermons, in the form of a critical conversation, to
tease out the relationship between Jack Donne, Monarch of Wit, and
Dr Donne, Dean of St Pauls. Central to this study is a close
analysis of the poet's Third Satire, Donne's formative essay on
religion and doubt. Donne enjoyed the thrills and dangers of doubt.
Caught between the categorical imperatives of Sex and God, he made
creative use of the obscene and the blasphemous. Relativity and
relationship (with the world, the flesh and the devil) were his
themes. His visionary discourse is couched in the language of mad
love. He interrogates us and pushes us to interrogate our world.
The 18th century was a wealth of knowledge, exploration and rapidly
growing technology and expanding record-keeping made possible by
advances in the printing press. In its determination to preserve
the century of revolution, Gale initiated a revolution of its own:
digitization of epic proportions to preserve these invaluable works
in the largest archive of its kind. Now for the first time these
high-quality digital copies of original 18th century manuscripts
are available in print, making them highly accessible to libraries,
undergraduate students, and independent scholars.The
eighteenth-century fascination with Greek and Roman antiquity
followed the systematic excavation of the ruins at Pompeii and
Herculaneum in southern Italy; and after 1750 a neoclassical style
dominated all artistic fields. The titles here trace developments
in mostly English-language works on painting, sculpture,
architecture, music, theater, and other disciplines. Instructional
works on musical instruments, catalogs of art objects, comic
operas, and more are also included. ++++The below data was compiled
from various identification fields in the bibliographic record of
this title. This data is provided as an additional tool in helping
to insure edition identification: ++++British LibraryT087542London:
printed for the author, and sold by S. Crowder; and J. Binns, in
Leeds, Yorkshire, 1770. 4],112p.; 8
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