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In a thrilling interconnected narrative, You're in the Wrong Place
presents characters reaching for transcendence from a place they
cannot escape. Charles Baxter stated that "Joseph Harris has a
particular feeling for the Detroit suburbs and the slightly stunted
lives of the young people there....You're in the Wrong Place isn't
uniformly downbeat-there are all sorts of rays of hope that gleam
toward the end". The book, composed of twelve stories, begins in
the fall of 2008 with the shuttering of Dynamic Fabricating-a
fictional industrial shop located in the Detroit suburb of
Ferndale. Over the next seven years, the shop's former employees -
as well as their friends and families-struggle to find money,
purpose, and levity in a landscape suddenly devoid of work, faith,
and love. In "Would You Rather", a young couple brought together by
Dynamic Fabricating shares a blissful weekend in Northern Michigan,
unaware of the catastrophe that awaits them upon their return home.
In "Acolytes", a devout Catholic clings to her faith as her
brothers descend into cultish soccer violence. In "Memorial", an
ex-Dynamic worker scrapes money together for a tribute to his best
friend, lost to the war in Afghanistan. In "Was It Good for You?" a
cam girl deconstructs materialism with her ageng great aunt, a
luxury sales associate, and an anxious, faceless client. And in the
title story, simmering tensions come to a boil on a hot summer day
for a hardscrabble landscaping crew, hired by the local bank to
maintain the lawns of foreclosures In turns elegiac and harrowing,
You're in the Wrong Place blends lyric intensity with philosophical
eroticism to create a singular, powerful vision of contemporary
American life. Readers of contemporary fiction grounded in place
need to take up this collection.
This book (hardcover) is part of the TREDITION CLASSICS. It
contains classical literature works from over two thousand years.
Most of these titles have been out of print and off the bookstore
shelves for decades. The book series is intended to preserve the
cultural legacy and to promote the timeless works of classical
literature. Readers of a TREDITION CLASSICS book support the
mission to save many of the amazing works of world literature from
oblivion. With this series, tredition intends to make thousands of
international literature classics available in printed format again
- worldwide.
The Alpha Barrier was officially featured at a Roundtable
discussion facilitated by the National Defense University,
Washington D.C. on April 7, 2010. On that occasion, strategic
planners, policy personnel and decision makers representative of
the highest levels of government discussed and offered perspectives
on the arguments put forward in the book. Within 2 days of the
Roundtable, two strategically timed and calibrated visits were
launched to countries that were identified in the publication as
key geo-strategic players that should be of immediate concern to
the United States, 1. The visit of Defence Secretary Robert Gates
in April. The visit of Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton in June
The successive itineraries were specifically intended to bolster
and consolidate accords in the area of defense cooperation, to
reaffirm the commitment of the Obama administration to the
promotion of cooperation and partnership and to render tangible
support for the Caribbean Basin Security Initiative in the form of
a $73 million Congressional budgetary allocation. The latter would
fuel a collective regional offensive against the trafficking of
drugs and firearms and effectively stymie the cross-border flows of
illicit proceeds derived from the drug trade. These high-profiled
visits have lent salience and relevancy to the arguments advanced
in The Alpha Barrier...that there is a political imperative for the
Obama administration to reinvigorate relationships between the
United States and specific players in the south and thereby redress
the legacy of diffused interest that typified the post 9/11 era.
This compels the application of a new brand of statecraft that is
compatible with a drastically altered strategic environment. Key
components of this statecraft must necessarily be multilateralism
and consensual decision making. The selective delivery of aid
packages is merely a first step. The Alpha Barrier is an insightful
book that touches on the above topics in detail, and offers
clear-minded discussion on these very important issues.
During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, France became
famous - notorious even - across Europe for its ambitious attempts
to codify and theorise a system of universally valid dramatic
'rules'. So fundamental and formative was this 'classical'
conception of drama that it still underpins our modern conception
of theatre today. Yet rather than rehearsing familiar arguments
about plays, Inventing the Spectator reads early modern France's
dramatic theory against the grain, tracing instead the profile and
characteristics of the spectator that these arguments imply: the
living, breathing individual in whose mind, senses, and experience
the theatre comes to life. In so doing, Joseph Harris raises
numerous questions - of imagination and illusion, reason and
emotion, vision and aurality, to name but a few - that strike at
the very heart of human psychology, cognition, and experience.
Bridging the gap between literary and theatre studies, history of
psychology, and intellectual history, Inventing the Spectator thus
reconstructs the theatre spectator's experience as it was
understood and theorised within French dramatic theory between the
Renaissance and the Revolution. It explores early modern
spectatorship through three main themes (illusion and the senses;
pleasure and narrative; interest and identification) and five key
dramatic theoreticians (d'Aubignac, Corneille, Dubos, Rousseau, and
Diderot). As it demonstrates, the period's dramatic rules are at
heart rules of psychology, cognition, and affect that emerged out
of a complex dialogue with human subjectivity in all its richness.
This work is the history of the Carmelite Order, from its
foundation in the 13th century until 1959. A life-long project of
its author, Joachim Smet, O. Carm., this work provides the reader
with a well researched documentation of the people, places and
events which have marked the 800 year history of this religious
Order of Catholic Church. Fr. Smet is recognized as one of the
Order's premier historians.This book is a digest of The Carmelites,
Darien, Ill, 1976-1988, 4 v. in 5. Footnotes have been omitted. The
reader interested in sources may refer to the unabridged
original.The title recalls a classic work in the historiography of
the Carmelite Order: the Speculum carmelitanum (1686).
The notion of « exposure underlies much modern thinking about
identity, representation, ethics, desire and sexuality. This
provocative notion is explored in a collection of essay selected
form, and inspired by, the proceedings of a conference held in the
Department of French at the University of Cambridge in 2002. The
authors engage with exposure as both object and mode of
representation in a range of cultural media: literature, critical
theory, visual art and film. They analyse a variety of works from
the medieval, early-modern, and modern periods, examining not only
canonical texts such as Montaigne's Essais but also lesser-studied
works such as the psychoanalytic theory of Didier Anzieu, the
photomontage self-portraits of Claude Cahun, and the novel La
Nouvelle Pornographie by Marie Nimier. This volume thus both
illustrates and, more importantly, interrogates the richness of the
term « exposure, in a way that is stimulating for students and
researchers alike.
Joseph Harris (1704-64) was equally distinguished as an astronomer
and as an expert on coinage. From a humble background, he came to
the attention of Edmond Halley, the Astronomer Royal. He spent some
time making astronomical observations in South America and the West
Indies, and familiarised himself with marine navigational practice,
proposing improvements to measuring equipment and publishing a very
popular instructional work on the uses of globes and orreries. He
later observed the 1761 transit of Venus from Wales. Harris entered
the Royal Mint in 1736, and became the King's Assay Master in 1749.
This influential 1757 work, considered by the Victorian economist
J. R. McCulloch as 'one of the best and most valuable treatises on
the subject of money that has ever seen the light', argues that it
is vital to a country's economy that the value of precious metal in
its coinage remains constant.
Examinations of the date of Beowulf have tremendous significance
for Anglo-Saxon culture in general. This book will be a milestone,
and deserves to be widely read. The early Beowulf that
overwhelmingly emerges here asks hard questions, and the same
strictly defined measures of metre, spelling, onomastics,
semantics, genealogy, and historicity all cry out to be tested
further and applied more broadly to the whole corpus of Old English
verse. Andy Orchard, Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of
Anglo-Saxon, University of Oxford. The datingof Beowulf has been a
central question in Anglo-Saxon studies for the past two centuries,
since it affects not only the interpretation of Beowulf, but also
the trajectory of early English literary history. By exploring
evidence for the poem's date of composition, these essays
contribute to a wide range of pertinent fields, including
historical linguistics, Old English metrics, onomastics, and
textual criticism. Many aspects of Anglo-Saxon literary culture are
likewise examined, as contributors gauge the chronological
significance of the monsters, heroes, history, and theology brought
together in Beowulf. Discussions of methodology and the history of
the discipline also figure prominently in this collection. Overall,
the dating of Beowulf here provides a productive framework for
evaluating evidence and drawing informed conclusions about its
chronological significance. These conclusions enhance our
appreciation of Beowulf and improve our understanding of the poem's
place in literary history. Leonard Neidorf is a Junior Fellow at
the Harvard Society of Fellows. Contributors: Frederick M. Biggs,
Thomas A. Bredehoft, George Clark, Dennis Cronan, Michael D.C.
Drout, Allen J. Frantzen, R.D. Fulk, Megan E. Hartman, Joseph
Harris, Thomas D. Hill, Leonard Neidorf, Rafael J. Pascual, Tom
Shippey
Born in rural Wales, to which he always felt a close connection,
Joseph Harris (c.1704-64) moved to London in 1724, presenting the
Astronomer Royal, Edmond Halley, with a testimonial of his
mathematical ability. Harris then found work as an astronomer and
teaching of navigation; his observations of magnetism and solar
eclipses taken in Vera Cruz in 1726 and 1727 were relayed to the
Royal Society by Halley. Harris' illustrated introduction to the
solar system was originally printed for the instrument-maker Thomas
Wright and the globe-maker Richard Cushee; it is here reissued in
its 1731 first edition. Clearly describing the use of astronomical
apparatus such as globes and orreries, it proved very popular,
going through fourteen printings by 1793. Harris starts with an
overview of the solar system and the fixed stars, and then shows
how to solve astronomical problems using globes and orreries.
Examinations of the date of Beowulf have tremendous significance
for Anglo-Saxon culture in general. This book will be a milestone,
and deserves to be widely read. The early Beowulf that
overwhelmingly emerges here asks hard questions, and the same
strictly defined measures of metre, spelling, onomastics,
semantics, genealogy, and historicity all cry out to be tested
further and applied more broadly to the whole corpus of Old English
verse. Andy Orchard, Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of
Anglo-Saxon, University of Oxford. The datingof Beowulf has been a
central question in Anglo-Saxon studies for the past two centuries,
since it affects not only the interpretation of Beowulf, but also
the trajectory of early English literary history. By exploring
evidence for the poem's date of composition, the essays in this
volume contribute to a wide range of pertinent fields, including
historical linguistics, Old English metrics, onomastics, and
textual criticism. Many aspects of Anglo-Saxon literary culture are
likewise examined, as contributors gauge the chronological
significance of the monsters, heroes, history, and theology brought
together in Beowulf. Discussions of methodology and the history of
the discipline also figure prominently in this collection. Overall,
the dating of Beowulf here provides a productive framework for
evaluating evidence and drawing informed conclusions about its
chronological significance. These conclusions enhance our
appreciation of Beowulf and improve our understanding of the poem's
place in literary history. Leonard Neidorf is a Junior Fellow at
the Harvard Society of Fellows. Contributors: Frederick M. Biggs,
Thomas A. Bredehoft, George Clark, Dennis Cronan, Michael D.C.
Drout, Allen J. Frantzen, R.D. Fulk, Megan E. Hartman, Joseph
Harris, Thomas D. Hill, Leonard Neidorf, Rafael J. Pascual, Tom
Shippey
Although originally written for men preparing for solemn vows in
the Carmelite Order, this Thirty-Day Retreat can be used for
Carmelite nuns, sisters, and Carmelite laity with little or no
adaptation. The individual Carmelite experiences the tremendous
spiritual wealth of the Order during such a retreat. One's
spiritual life will have the opportunity to grow and increase under
the watchful eye of a seasoned Carmelite skilled to lead one on
this pilgrimage of thirty days. The director will also experience
the spiritual wealth of such a long in this pilgrimage of thirty
days. Fortified in the faith and in the Carmelite traditions, these
individuals can have an effect in their own Carmelite communities
locally and in the ministries in which they are involved.
Comparative studies of a number of mixed prose-and-verse
literatures, from Europe to the Orient, from classical culture to
the 19th century. In virtually all the literary traditions of the
world there are works of verbal art that depend for part of their
effect on the juxtaposition of prose and verse. This volume takes
the first step towards a comparative study of "prosimetrum", the
mixture of prose and verse, with essays by leading linguists and
literary scholars of a selection of prosimetrical traditions. The
nature of what constitutes verse or prose is one underlying
question addressed. An outline of historical developments emerges,
especially for Europe and the Near East, with articles on
classical, medieval and nineteenth-century literatures. Oriental
prosimetrical literatures discussed include that of Vedic Indiaand
the old literary cultures of China and Japan; also represented are
oral and oral-derived folk literatures of recent centuries in
Africa, the West, and Inner Asia. Professor KARL REICHL teaches in
the English Department at the University of Bonn; Professor JOSEPH
HARRIS teaches in the English Department at Harvard University.
Contributors: KRISTIN HANSON, PAUL KIPARSKY, JAN ZIOLKOWSKI, ARDIS
BUTTERFIELD, PROINSIAS Mac CANA, JOSEPH HARRIS, JUDITH RYAN, W.F.H.
NICOLAISEN, LEE HARING, STEVEN WEITZMAN, WOLFHART HEINRICHS, DWIGHT
REYNOLDS, JULIE SCOTT MEISAMI, KARL REICHL, WALTHER HEISSIG
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