|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
|
Hinton (Paperback)
Mark Blacklock
bundle available
|
R222
Discovery Miles 2 220
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
Howard Hinton and his family are living in Japan, escaping from a
scandal. Hinton's obsessions are his work - speculative voyages
into the fourth dimension of space - and his wife and sons, each of
whom yearns to find escape from entanglement in the strange and
unknown landscapes of Hinton's science fictions. A ravishing period
piece of late-Victorian social, scientific and domestic life,
Hinton is about extraordinary discoveries, and terrible choices. It
is about those who discover and map other realms, and the
implications for those of us left behind.
|
Selected Nonfiction, 1962-2007
J.G. Ballard; Edited by Mark Blacklock; Foreword by Tom McCarthy
|
R671
Discovery Miles 6 710
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
|
I'm Jack (Paperback)
Mark Blacklock
1
bundle available
|
R275
R227
Discovery Miles 2 270
Save R48 (17%)
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
In this provocative novel Mark Blacklock portrays the true and
complex history of John Humble, aka Wearside Jack, the Ripper
Hoaxer, a timewaster and criminal, sympathetic and revolting, the
man hidden by a wall of words, a fiction-spinner worthy of textual
analysis. In this remarkable work, John Humble leads the reader
into an allusive, elusive labyrinth of interpretations,
simultaneously hoodwinking and revealing. I'm Jack is a riveting
novel about truth, lies, prison and shame. It is also a profound
and furious love letter to Sunderland. It is a puzzle, a hoax, a
multi-voice portrait and a virtuoso assemblage of textual elements.
I'm Jack announces the arrival of a radically talented and
innovative novelist.
The Emergence of the Fourth Dimension describes the development and
proliferation of the idea of higher dimensional space in the late
nineteenth- and early twentieth-centuries. An idea from mathematics
that was appropriated by occultist thought, it emerged in the fin
de siecle as a staple of genre fiction and influenced a number of
important Modernist writers and artists. Providing a context for
thinking of space in dimensional terms, the volume describes an
active interplay between self-fashioning disciplines and a key
moment in the popularisation of science. It offers new research
into spiritualism and the Theosophical Society and studies a series
of curious hybrid texts. Examining works by Joseph Conrad, Ford
Madox Ford, H.G. Wells, Henry James, H. P. Lovecraft, and others,
the volume explores how new theories of the possibilities of time
and space influenced fiction writers of the period, and how
literature shaped, and was in turn shaped by, the reconfiguration
of imaginative space occasioned by the n-dimensional turn. A timely
study of the interplay between philosophy, literature, culture, and
mathematics, it offers a rich resource for readers interested in
nineteenth century literature, Modernist studies, science fiction,
and gothic scholarship.
|
|