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A comprehensive examination of the Chronicles by Curtis and Madsen,
including critical discussions on historical and religious value,
variations of the text and the genealogy and history of David,
Solomon and Judah.
Press coverage of the 1888 mutilation murders attributed to Jack
the Ripper was of necessity filled with gaps and silences, for the
killer remained unknown and Victorian journalists had little
experience reporting serial murders and sex crimes. This engrossing
book examines how fifteen London newspapers - dailies and weeklies,
highbrow and lowbrow - presented the Ripper news, in the process
revealing much about the social, political, and sexual anxieties of
late Victorian Britain and the role of journalists in reinforcing
social norms. L. Perry Curtis surveys the mass newspaper culture of
the era, delving into the nature of sensationalism and the
conventions of domestic murder news. Analyzing the fifteen
newspapers - several of which emanated from the East End, where the
murders took place - he shows how journalists played on the fears
of readers about law and order by dwelling on lethal violence
rather than sex, offering gruesome details about knife injuries but
often withholding some of the more intimate details of the pelvic
mutilations. He also considers how the Ripper news affected public
perceptions of social conditions in Whitechapel. 'It is a major
contribution to cultural history', Christopher Frayling, Rector of
the Royal College of Art, London 'An excellent book that offers a
new angle on an always fascinating subject', John Davis, Queen's
College, Oxford L. Perry Curtis, Jr., is professor of history and
modern culture and media at Brown University, Rhode Island.
Renee Curtis's three-volume critical edition of the Prose Tristanis
the only edition of this very important medieval work ever
published; until the first volume appeared in 1963, the work was
only accessible in the form of a few fragments which had been
edited and a summary of the romance made by E. LoRseth in 1891. Dr
Curtis's edition is based on a complete collation of all the
manuscripts, and this led her to choose the Carpentras manuscript
(404) as the basis of her edition.
The publication of this book is an event of some importance in
Arthurian studies. The Prose Tristanwas one of the most widely read
works in medieval France; written between 1215 and 1235, it
continued to be copied until the end of the Middle Ages and its
popularity lasted another hundred years in printed editions. It was
in fact in prose rather than in poetic form that the legend was
known - Dr Curtis is to be warmly congratulated on undertaking this
important task.' ERASMUS (BRIAN WOLEDGE)This three volume critical
edition of the Prose Tristan, based on a complete collation of all
the manuscripts with the Carpentras manuscript (404), is the first
edition of this important medieval work ever published. RenA(c)e
Curtis's three-volume critical edition of the Prose Tristanis the
only edition of this very important medieval work ever published;
until the first volume (now reprinted with corrections) appeared in
1963, the work was only accessible in the form of a few fragments
which had been edited and a summary of the romance made by E.
LAseth in 1891. Dr Curtis's edition is based on a complete
collation of all the manuscripts, and this led her to choose the
Carpentras manuscript (404) as the basis of her edition. Professor
Brian Woledge, the eminent medievalist, wrote of this first volume
in Erasmus: The publication of this book is an event of some
importance in Arthurian studies. The Prose Tristanwas one of the
most widely read works in medieval France; written between 1215 and
1235, it continued to be copied until the end of the Middle Ages
and its popularity lasted another hundred years in printed
editions. It was in fact in prose rather than in poetic form that
the legend was known -DrCurtis is to be warmly congratulated on
undertaking this important task.'
Beginning from scratch and developing the standard topics of Linear
Algebra, this book is intended as a text for a first course on the
subject. The goal to which this work leads is the Theorem of
Hurwitz - that the only normed algebras over the real numbers are
the real numbers, the complex numbers, the quaternions, and the
octonions. Unique in presenting this material at an elementary
level, the book stresses the complete logical development of the
subject and will provide a bavuable reference for mathematicians in
general.
Renee Curtis's three-volume critical edition of the Prose Tristan
is the only edition of this very important medieval work ever
published; until the first volume appeared in 1963, the work was
only accessible in the form of a few fragments which had been
edited and a summary of the romance made by E. Loseth in 1891. Dr
Curtis's edition is based on a complete collation of all the
manuscripts and this led her to choose the Carpentras manuscript
404 as the basis of her edition. This second volume appeared
in1976. Professor Brian Woledge, the eminent medievalislt, wrote of
the first volume in Erasmus: "The publication of this book is an
event of some importance in Arthurian studies. The Prose Tristan
was one of the most widely read works in medieval France; written
between1215 and 1235, it continued to be copied until the end of
the Middle Ages and its popularity lasted another hundred years in
printed editions. It was in fact in prose rather than in poetic
form that the legend was known.... Dr Curtis is to warmly
congratulated on undertaking this important task"
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Cast the First Stone (Paperback)
Tenesha L Curtis; Foreword by Jesse Haack; Illustrated by Landon Green
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R245
Discovery Miles 2 450
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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