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Essays demonstrating how the careful study of individual words can
shed immense light on texts more broadly. Dedicated to honoring the
remarkable achievements of Dr Antonette di Paolo Healey, the
architect and lexicographer of the Old English Concordance, the
Dictionary of Old English Web Corpus, and the Dictionary of Old
English, the essays in this volume reflect firsthand the research
made possible by Dr. Healey's landmark contributions to her field.
Each chapter highlights how the careful consideration and study of
words can lead to greater insights, from an understanding of early
medieval English concepts of time and identity, to
reconceptualizations of canonical Old English poems, reappraisals
of early medieval English authors and their works, greater
understanding of the semantic fields of Old English words and
manuscript traditions, and the solving of lexical puzzles. MAREN
CLEGG HYER is Professor of English at Valdosta State University;
HARUKO MOMMA is Professor of English at NewYork University;
SAMANTHA ZACHER is Professor of English and Medieval Studies at
Cornell University. Contributors: Brianna Daigneault, Damian
Fleming, Roberta Frank, Robert Getz, Joyce Hill, Joan Holland,
Maren Clegg Hyer, Christopher A. Jones, R.M. Liuzza, Haruko Momma,
Katherine O'Brien O'Keeffe, Andy Orchard, Stephen Pelle, Christine
Rauer, Terri Sanderson, Donald Scragg, Paul Szarmach, M. J.
Toswell, Audrey Walton, Samantha Zacher.
Studies and editions of Anglo-Saxon apocryphal materials, filling a
gap in literature available on the boundaries between apocryphal
and orthodox in the period. Apocrypha and apocryphal traditions in
Anglo-Saxon England have been often referred to but little studied.
This collection fills a gap in the study of pre-Conquest England by
considering what were the boundaries between apocryphaland orthodox
in the period and what uses the Anglo-Saxons made of apocryphal
materials. The contributors include some of the most well-known and
respected scholars in the field. The introduction - written by
Frederick M. Biggs, one of the principal editors of Sources of
Anglo-Saxon Literary Culture - expertly situates the essays within
the field of apocrypha studies. The essays themselves cover a broad
range of topics: both vernacular and Latin texts, those available
in Anglo-Saxon England and those actually written there, and the
uses of apocrypha in art as well as literature. Additionally, the
book includes a number of completely new editions of apocryphal
texts which were previously unpublished or difficult to access. By
presenting these new texts along with the accompanying range of
essays, the collection aims to retrieve these apocryphal traditions
from the margins of scholarship and restore tothem some of the
importance they held for the Anglo-Saxons. Contributors: DANIEL
ANLEZARK, FREDERICK M. BIGGS, ELIZABETH COATSWORTH, THOMAS N. HALL,
JOYCE HILL, CATHERINE KARKOV, PATRIZIA LENDINARA, AIDEEN O'LEARY,
CHARLES D. WRIGHT.
Conservation of Easel Paintings, Second Edition provides a
much-anticipated update to the previous edition, which has come to
be known internationally as an invaluable and comprehensive text on
the history, philosophy and methods of the treatment of easel
paintings. Including 49 chapters written by more than 90 respected
authors from around the world, this volume offers the necessary
background knowledge in technical art history, artists' materials
and scientific methods of examination and documentation. Later
sections of the book provide information about the varying
approaches and methods for treatment and issues of preventive
conservation, as well as valuable reflections on storage, shipping,
and exhibition. Including exciting developments that have taken
place since the last edition was published, the book also covers
new techniques of examination, especially MacroXRF scanning and
Reflectance Transmission Imagery. Drawing on research presented at
recent professional conferences, information about innovative
methods for cleaning modern and contemporary paintings and insights
into modern oil paints is also included. Incorporating the latest
regulations and understanding of health and safety practices and
integrating theory with practice throughout, Conservation of Easel
Paintings, Second Edition will continue to be an indispensable
reference for practicing conservators. It will also be an essential
resource for students taking conservation courses around the world.
New research into the liturgy of Anglo-Saxon history, with
important implications for church history in general. The essays in
this volume offer the fruits of new research into the liturgical
rituals of later Anglo-Saxon England. They include studies of
individual rites, the production, adaptation and transmission of
texts, vernacular gospeltranslations, liturgical drama and the
influence of the liturgy on medical remedies, poetry and
architecture; also covered are the tenth-century Benedictine
Reforms and the growth of pastoral care. It will be valuable for
anyoneinterested in later Anglo-Saxon England as well as medieval
liturgy and church history.
Essays bring out the important and complex roles played by
Anglo-Saxon churchmen, including Bede and lesser-known figures.
Both episcopal and abbatial authority were of fundamental
importance to the development of the Christian church in
Anglo-Saxon England. Bishops and heads of monastic houses were
invested with a variety of types of power and influence. Their
actions, decisions, and writings could change not only their own
institutions, but also the national church, while their interaction
with the king and his court affected wider contemporary society.
Theories of ecclesiastical leadership were expounded in
contemporary texts and documents. But how far did image or ideal
reflect reality? How much room was there for individuals to use
their office to promote new ideas? The papers in this
volumeillustrate the important roles played by individual leading
ecclesiastics in England, both within the church and in the wider
political sphere, from the late seventh to the mid eleventh
century. The undeniable authority of Bede and Bishop AEthelwold is
demonstrated but also the influence of less-familiar figures such
as Bishop Wulfsige of Sherborne, Archbishop Ecgberht of York and St
Leoba. The book draws on both textual and material evidence to show
the influence (by both deed and reputation) of powerful
personalities not only on the developing institutions of the
English church but also on the secular politics of their time.
Contributors: Alexander R. Rumble, Nicholas J.Higham, Martyn J.
Ryan, Cassandra Rhodes, Allan Scott McKinley, Dominik Wassenhoven,
Gale R. Owen-Crocker, Debby Banham, Joyce Hill.
Wide-ranging and current research into the Anglo-Norman and Angevin
worlds. This volume of the Haskins Society Journal brings together
a rich and interdisciplinary collection of articles. Topics range
from the politics and military organization of northern worlds of
the Anglo-Normans and Angevins in the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries, to the economic activity of women in Catalonia and
political unrest in thirteenth-century Tripoli. Martin Millett's
chapter on the significance of rural life in Roman Britain for the
early Middle Ages continues the Journal's commitment to
archaeological approaches to medieval history, while contributions
on AElfric's complex use of sources in his homilies, Byrhtferth of
Ramsey's reinterpretation of the Alfredian past, and the little
known History of Alfred of Beverly engage with crucial questions of
sources and historiographical production within Anglo-Saxon and
Anglo-Norman England. Pieces on the political meaning of the
EmpressHelena and Constantine I for Angevin political ambitions and
the role of relics such as the Holy Lance in strategies of
political legitimation in Anglo-Saxon England and Ottonian Germany
in the tenth century complete the volume. Contributors: David
Bachrach, Mark Blincoe, Katherine Cross, Sarah Ifft Decker, Joyce
Hill, Katherine Hodges-Kluck, Jesse Izzo, Martin Millett, John
Patrick Slevin, Oliver Stoutner, Laura Wangerin.
Essays centred round the representation of weaving, both real and
imagined, in the early middle ages. The triple themes of textile,
text, and intertext, three powerful and evocative subjects within
both Anglo-Saxon studies and Old English literature itself, run
through the essays collected here. Chapters evoke the semantic
complexities of textile references and images drawn from the Bayeux
Tapestry, examine parallels in word-woven poetics, riddling texts,
and interwoven homiletic and historical prose, and identify
iconographical textures in medieval art. The volume thus considers
the images and creative strategies of textiles, texts, and
intertexts, generating a complex and fascinating view of the
material culture and metaphorical landscape of the Anglo-Saxon
peoples. It is therefore a particularly fitting tribute to
Professor Gale R. Owen-Crocker, whose career and lengthy list of
scholarly works have centred on her interests in the meaning and
cultural importance of textiles, manuscripts and text, and
intertextual relationships between text and textile. MAREN CLEGG
HYER is Associate Professor and Graduate Coordinator in the
Department of English at Valdosta State University; JILL FREDERICK
is Professor of English at Minnesota State University Moorhead.
Contributors: Marilina Cesario, Elizabeth Coatsworth, Martin Foys,
Jill Frederick, Joyce Hill, Maren Clegg Hyer, Catherine E. Karkov,
Christina Lee, Michael Lewis, Robin Netherton, Carol Neuman de
Vegvar, Donald Scragg, Louise Sylvester, Paul Szarmach, Elaine
Treharne.
Bilingual editions of the Scandinavian versions of the Tristan
legend, themselves derived from Old French originals. This
three-volume set of editions and translations celebrates the
literary and cultural connections between the Nordic countries and
France that helped to bring Tristan and the Arthurian romances
northward... thus the entire set of texts can be read as a study in
Norse literary patronage, of literary renewal and transformation...
A major contribution, not only to the Old Norse field, but to the
broader world of medieval literature and culture. Norse Romance
will endure for years to come. SPECULUM Norse Romances comprises a
three-volume set, making available for the first time critical
editions and translations of important medieval Arthurian texts
from Iceland, Norway and Sweden, under the general editorship of
Marianne Kalinke. This volume is devoted to the Tristan legend. It
contains Geitarlauf and Janual, Old Norse translations of the
French lais Lanval and Chevrefeuil; Tristrams saga ok Isoendar,
Brother Thomas's Old Norse translationof Thomas's Tristan, dated
1226 and commissioned by King Hakon Hakonarson the Old of Norway;
"Tristrams kvaedi", a fourteenth-century Icelandic "Tristan"
ballad; and the Saga af Tristram ok Isodd, a fourteenth-century
Icelandic version of the Old Norse Tristrams saga ok Isoendar. The
translators are: ROBERT COOK, PETER JORGENSEN, JOYCE HILL, MARIANNE
E. KALINKE. Professor MARIANNE KALINKE teaches in the Department of
Germanic Languages and Literatures at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign.
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Rethinking Andrew Wyeth (Hardcover)
David Cateforis; Contributions by Wanda Corn, Alexander Nemerov, Joyce Hill Stoner, Randall C. Griffin, …
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R1,489
R1,200
Discovery Miles 12 000
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Andrew Wyeth is one of the best loved and most widely recognized
artists in American history, yet for much of his career he was
reviled by the art world's critical elite. Rethinking Andrew Wyeth
reevaluates Wyeth and his place in American art, trying to
reconcile these two opposing images of the man and his work. In
addition to surveying the American critical reception of Wyeth's
art over the seven decades of his career, David Cateforis brings
together a collection of essays featuring new critical and
scholarly responses to the artist. Donald Kuspit's compelling
psycho-philosophical interpretation of Wyeth exemplifies the
possibility of new approaches to understanding his work that move
beyond the Wyeth "curse," as do those of the other contributors to
this volume - from the close analysis of Wyeth's technical means
offered by Joyce Hill Stoner, to the adventuresome interpretive
readings of individual Wyeth paintings advanced by Alexander
Nemerov and Randall C. Griffin, the considerations of Wyeth's
critical reception in historical context offered by Wanda M. Corn
and Katie Robinson Edwards, and the connections of Wyeth to other
canonical artists such as Francine Weiss' comparison of him to
Robert Frost and Patricia Junker's linkage of Wyeth and Marcel
Duchamp. Rethinking Andrew Wyeth includes an appendix with data
from visitor surveys conducted at the Wyeth retrospectives in San
Francisco in 1973 and Philadelphia in 2006. Illustrated throughout
with both iconic and lesser-known examples of Wyeth's work, this
book will appeal to academic, museum, and popular audiences seeking
a deeper understanding and appreciation of Andrew Wyeth's art
through its critical reception and interpretation. Edited by David
Cateforis, with essays by David Cateforis, Wanda M. Corn, Katie
Robinson Edwards, Randall C. Griffin, Patricia Junker, Donald
Kuspit, Alexander Nemerov, Joyce Hill Stoner, and Francine Weiss.
This volume's release coincides with an exhibition at the National
Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. in 2014, Andrew Wyeth: Looking
Out, Looking In.
Significant Anglo-Saxon papers, with postscripts, illustrate
advances in knowledge of life and culture of pre-Conquest England.
Thomas Northcote Toller, of the Bosworth-Toller Anglo-Saxon
Dictionary, is one of the most influential but least known
Anglo-Saxon scholars of the early twentieth century. The Centre for
Anglo-Saxon Studies at Manchester, where Toller was the first
professor of English Language, has an annual Toller lecture,
delivered by an expert in the field of Anglo-Saxon Studies; this
volume offers a selection from these lectures, brought together for
the firsttime, and with supplementary material added by the authors
to bring them up to date. They are complemented by the 2002 Toller
Lecture, Peter Baker's study of Toller, commissioned specially for
this book; and by new examinations ofToller's life and work, and
his influence on the development of Old English lexicography. The
volume is therefore both an epitome of the best scholarship in
Anglo-Saxon studies of the last decade and a half, and a guide for
the modern reader through the major advances in our knowledge of
the life and culture of pre-Conquest England. , Contributors:
RICHARD BAILEY, PETER BAKER, DABNEY ANDERSON BANKERT, JANET BATELY,
GEORGE BROWN, ROBERTA FRANK, HELMUT GNEUSS, JOYCE HILL, DAVID A.
HINTON, MICHAEL LAPIDGE, AUDREY MEANEY, KATHERINE O'BRIEN O'KEEFFE,
JOANA PROUD, ALEXANDER RUMBLE.
A school assignment to look for an old penny opens up a world of
adventure and living history for a group of students. Join them as
they search for old pennies, hold them in their hands and wonder:
Who held them when they were new? What was this country like? With
each penny found, more history comes alive. The pennies lead back
to the wave of immigration in the early 1900s, through the
Influenza epidemic and The Great War, on to the Harlem Renaissance,
the Depression and World War II. All this is seen through the eyes
of young people the same age as the students. The powerful ending
demonstrates how a simple penny can tie people together and carry a
strong message of hope and the American spirit. The book includes
discussion questions intended to stimulate thought-provoking
conversation and creativity. The book is suited for the home,
classroom, library or homeschool bookshelf.
The book is also available in hardcover (ISBN 978-0-9795818-0-9)
A school assignment to look for an old penny opens up a world of
adventure and living history for a group of students. Join them as
they search for old pennies, hold them in their hands and wonder:
Who held them when they were new?What was this country like? With
each penny found, more history comes alive. The pennies lead back
to the wave of immigration in the early 1900s, through the
Influenza epidemic and The Great War, on to the Harlem Renaissance,
the Depression and World War II. All this is seen through the eyes
of young people the same age as the students. The powerful ending
demonstrates how a simple penny can tie people together and carry a
strong message of hope and the American spirit. The book includes
discussion questions intended to stimulate thought-provoking
conversation and creativity. It is ideally suited for the home,
classroom, library or homeschool bookshelf.
The book is also available in paperback (ISBN 978-0-9795818-1-6)
Text with facing translation of the Scandinavian versions of the
Tristan legend. This is the first in a set of three volumes making
available for the first time critical editions and translations of
important medieval Arthurian texts from Iceland, Norway and Sweden.
Devoted to the Tristan legend. It contains Geitarlauf and Janual,
Old Norse translations of the French lais Lanval and Chevrefeuil;
Tristrams saga ok Isoendar, Brother Thomas's Old Norse translation
of Thomas's Tristan, dated 1226 and commissioned by King Hakon
Hakonarson the Old of Norway; "Tristrams kvaedi", a
fourteenth-century Icelandic "Tristan" ballad; and the Saga af
Tristram ok Isodd, a fourteenth-century Icelandic version of the
Old Norse Tristrams saga ok Isoendar. The translators are: ROBERT
COOK, PETER JORGENSEN, JOYCE HILL, MARIANNE E. KALINKE. Professor
MARIANNE KALINKE teaches in the Department of Germanic Languages
and Literatures at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
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