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Hatchback & Estate (`Mk 7'). Petrol: 1.2 litre (1197cc), 1.4
litre (1395cc) & 2.0 litre (1984cc). Diesel: 1.6 litre (1598cc)
& 2.0 litre (1968cc). Does NOT cover 1.0 litre 3-cylinder or
1.6/1.8 litre 4-cylinder petrol engines, all-electric or hybrid
models, convertible, Clubsport S, Golf R or dual fuel models. Does
NOT cover facelifted Golf range introduced for 2017.
Hatchback with 1.2 litre (1242cc) petrol engine. Does NOT cover
diesel engine models or new 'Ka+' range introduced October 2016
S-MAX & Galaxy MPVs Turbo-diesel: 1.6 litre (1560cc), 1.8 litre
(1753cc), 2.0 litre (1997cc) & 2.2 litre (2179cc) Does NOT
cover petrol models or 'Powershift' or automatic transmissions Does
NOT cover new S-MAX and Galaxy ranges introduced July 2015
S40 Saloon & V50 Estate Petrol: 1.8 litre (1798cc), 2.0 litre
(1999cc) & 2.4 litre (2435cc) 4- & 5-cylinder Turbo-diesel:
1.6 litre (1560cc), 2.0 litre (1984cc & 1998cc) & 2.4 litre
(2400cc) 4- & 5-cylinder Does NOT cover 1.6 litre or 2.5 litre
'T5' petrol engines or 2.4 litre 'T9' diesel engine. Does NOT cover
'Classic', AWD (four-wheel-drive) models or 'Powershift'
transmission.
SEAT Ibiza May 2008 to June 2017 'Mk 4' 3-door Hatchback (SC),
5-door Hatchback & Estate (ST) Petrol: 1.0 litre (999cc) 'MPI'
& 'TSI', 1.2 litre 4-cylinder 'TSI' (1197cc) & 1.4 litre
'MPI' (1390cc) Turbo-Diesel: 1.6 litre (1598cc) Does NOT cover 1.2
litre 3-cylinder ('MPI'), 1.4 litre 'TSI', 1.6 litre, 1.8 litre or
2.0 litre petrol engines Does NOT cover 1.2 litre, 1.4 litre, 1.9
litre or 2.0 litre diesel engines Does NOT cover FR or Cupra
models, or new 'Mk 5' Ibiza range introduced July 2017
Caddy panel vans with 1.6 litre (1598cc), 1.9 litre (1896cc) &
2.0 litre (1968cc) turbo-diesel engines Does NOT cover petrol
models or four-wheel-drive '4-Motion' versions Does NOT cover
features specific to Caddy Life, Caddy Maxi
Leon 'Mk 2' Hatchback, inc. Cupra and Cupra R. Petrol: 1.6 litre
(1595cc) & 2.0 litre (1984cc). Turbo-diesel: 1.6 litre
(1598cc), 1.9 litre (1896cc) & 2.0 litre (1968cc). Includes
coverage of models with DSG transmission. Does NOT cover 1.2, 1.4
or
These volumes gather together a body of critical sources on the
Jacobean dramatists. Each volume presents contemporary responses to
a writer's work, enabling students and researchers to read for
themselves, for example, comments on early performances of
Shakespeare's plays, or reactions to the first publication of Jane
Austen's novels. The selected sources range from important essays
in the history of criticism to journalism and contemporary opinion,
and documentary material such as letters and diaries. Significant
pieces of criticism from later periods are also included, in order
to demonstrate the fluctuations in an author's reputation. Each
volume contains an introduction to the writer's published works, a
selected bibliography, and an index of works, authors and subjects.
Models covered Ford Focus Hatchback and Estate. Does not cover
features specific to CC, C-Max or ST models. Petrol: 1.0 litre
(999cc) 'Ecoboost' & 1.6 litre (1596cc), turbo and non-turbo.
Does not cover 2 litre petrol engine. Turbo-diesel: 1.6 litre
(1560cc). UK vehicle population (Dec 2013) = 215,235
This is a book about two empires-America and Rome-and the forms of
time we create when we think about them together. Ranging from the
eighteenth century to the present day, through novels, journalism,
film, and photography, Time and Antiquity in American Empire
reconfigures our understanding of how cultural and political life
has generated an analogy between Roman antiquity and the imperial
US state-both to justify and perpetuate it, and to resist and
critique it. The book takes in a wide scope, from theories of
historical time and imperial culture, through the twin political
pillars of American empire-republicanism and slavery-to the popular
genres that have reimagined America's and Rome's sometimes strange
orbit: Christian fiction, travel writing, and science fiction.
Through this conjunction of literary history, classical reception
studies, and the philosophy of history, however, Time and Antiquity
in American Empire builds a more fundamental inquiry: about how we
imagine both our politics and ourselves within historical time. It
outlines a new relationship between text and context, and between
history and culture; one built on the oscillating, dialectical
logic of the analogy, and on a spatialising of historical
temporality through the metaphors of constellations and networks.
Offering a fresh reckoning with the historicist protocols of
literary study, this book suggests that recognizing the shape of
history we step into when we analogize with the past is also a way
of thinking about how we have read-and how we might yet read.
Megane Hatchback, Sport Tourer (Estate) & Coupe. Does NOT cover
Renaultsport versions or features specific to Coupe-Cabriolet.
Petrol: 1.6 litre (1598cc). Does NOT cover 1.2, 1.4 or 2.0 litre
petrol engines Diesel: 1.5 litre (1461cc). Does NOT cover 1.6, 1.9
or 2.0 litre diesel engines
The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical
sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents
contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling student and
researcher to read the material themselves.
Touran models with 1.6 litre (1598cc), 1.9 litre (1896cc) & 2.0
litre (1968cc) turbo-diesel engines Does NOT cover petrol models
Does NOT cover new VW Touran range introduced September 2015
Opening up the warm body of American Horror - through literature,
film, TV, music, video games, and a host of other mediums - this
book gathers the leading scholars in the field to dissect the
gruesome histories and shocking forms of American life. Through a
series of accessible and informed essays, moving from the
seventeenth century to the present day, The Cambridge Companion to
American Horror explores one of the liveliest and most progressive
areas of contemporary culture. From slavery to censorship, from
occult forces to monstrous beings, this book is essential reading
for anyone interested in America's most terrifying cultural
expressions.
Opening up the warm body of American Horror - through literature,
film, TV, music, video games, and a host of other mediums - this
book gathers the leading scholars in the field to dissect the
gruesome histories and shocking forms of American life. Through a
series of accessible and informed essays, moving from the
seventeenth century to the present day, The Cambridge Companion to
American Horror explores one of the liveliest and most progressive
areas of contemporary culture. From slavery to censorship, from
occult forces to monstrous beings, this book is essential reading
for anyone interested in America's most terrifying cultural
expressions.
Hatchback & Estate (Sport Tourer) Petrol: 1.2 litre (1149cc)
& 1.6 litre (1598cc), inc. turbo Turbo-diesel: 1.5 litre
(1461cc) Does NOT cover 2.0 litre petrol models or Renaultsport
versions Does NOT cover new Clio range introduced January 2013
Hatchback (8th generation) Does NOT cover Type R, IMA Hybrid or new
Civic range introduced February 2012 Petrol: 1.4 litre (1339cc)
& 1.8 litre (1799cc). Does NOT cover 2.0 litre petrol models
Turbo-Diesel: 2.2 litre (2204cc)
The diminishment of rural life at the hands of urbanization, for
many, defines the years between the end of the Civil War and the
dawn of the twentieth century in the U.S. Traditional literary
histories find this transformation clearly demarcated between rural
tales-stories set in the countryside, marked by attention to
regional dialect and close-knit communities-and grittier novels and
short stories that reflected the harsh realities of America's
growing cities. Challenging this conventional division, Mark Storey
proffers a capacious, trans-regional version of rural fiction that
contains and coexists with urban-industrial modernity.
To remap literary representations of the rural, Storey pinpoints
four key aspects of everyday life that recur with surprising
frequency in late nineteenth-century fiction: train journeys,
travelling circuses, country doctors, and lynch mobs. Fiction by
figures such as Hamlin Garland, Booth Tarkington, and William Dean
Howells use railroads and roving carnivals to signify the deeper
incursions of urban capitalism into the American countryside. A
similar, somewhat disruptive migration of the urban into the rural
occurs with the arrival of modern medicine, as viewed in depictions
of the country doctor in novels like Sarah Orne Jewett's A Country
Doctor and Harold Frederic's The Damnation of Theron Ware. This
discussion gives way to a far darker interaction between the urban
and the rural, with the intricate relationship of vigilante justice
to an emerging modernity used to frame readings of rural lynchings
in works by writers like Bret Harte, Charles Chesnutt, Paul
Laurence Dunbar, and Owen Wister. The four arenas-transport,
entertainment, medicine, and the law-used to organize the study
come together in a coda devoted to utopian fiction, which
demonstrates one of the more imaginative methods used to express
the social and literary anxieties around the changing nature of
urban and rural space at the end of the nineteenth century.
Mining a rich variety of long neglected novels and short stories,
Rural Fictions, Urban Realities provides a new literary geography
of Gilded Age America, and in the process, contributes to our
understanding of how we represent and register the cultural
complexities of modernization.
John Clare (1793-1864), poet and naturalist, was a prolific writer.
His letters to a large circle of friends and associates cover his
entire writing life and give a remarkable portrait of this man
whose life ended sadly in an insane asylum. This comprehensive
volume contains all Clare's known extant letters together with some
letters to him from his publisher and family; drafts and scraps are
included, as are poems incorporated in the letters, and Clare's
idiosyncrasies of spelling and punctuation are preserved. The
notes, drawing heavily on the large bulk of surviving
correspondence written by others to Clare, address themselves to
the intimate life carried on behind the letters. A chronology and
an index of correspondents enhance the volume.
The diminishment of rural life at the hands of urbanization, for
many, defines the years between the end of the Civil War and the
dawn of the twentieth century in the U.S. Traditional literary
histories find this transformation clearly demarcated between rural
tales-stories set in the countryside, marked by attention to
regional dialect and close-knit communities-and grittier novels and
short stories that reflected the harsh realities of America's
growing cities. Challenging this conventional division, Mark Storey
proffers a capacious, trans-regional version of rural fiction that
contains and coexists with urban-industrial modernity. To remap
literary representations of the rural, Storey pinpoints four key
aspects of everyday life that recur with surprising frequency in
late nineteenth-century fiction: train journeys, travelling
circuses, country doctors, and lynch mobs. Fiction by figures such
as Hamlin Garland, Booth Tarkington, and William Dean Howells use
railroads and roving carnivals to signify the deeper incursions of
urban capitalism into the American countryside. A similar, somewhat
disruptive migration of the urban into the rural occurs with the
arrival of modern medicine, as viewed in depictions of the country
doctor in novels like Sarah Orne Jewett's A Country Doctor and
Harold Frederic's The Damnation of Theron Ware. This discussion
gives way to a far darker interaction between the urban and the
rural, with the intricate relationship of vigilante justice to an
emerging modernity used to frame readings of rural lynchings in
works by writers like Bret Harte, Charles Chesnutt, Paul Laurence
Dunbar, and Owen Wister. The four arenas-transport, entertainment,
medicine, and the law-used to organize the study come together in a
coda devoted to utopian fiction, which demonstrates one of the more
imaginative methods used to express the social and literary
anxieties around the changing nature of urban and rural space at
the end of the nineteenth century. Mining a rich variety of long
neglected novels and short stories, Rural Fictions, Urban Realities
provides a new literary geography of Gilded Age America, and in the
process, contributes to our understanding of how we represent and
register the cultural complexities of modernization.
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Selected Letters (Hardcover)
John Clare; Edited by Mark Storey
bundle available
|
R2,297
R1,772
Discovery Miles 17 720
Save R525 (23%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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More than a century after his death, John Clare is being recognized
as a poet of importance and stature. Yet in his own day he was at
best a marginal figure, briefly celebrated as a 'Peasant Poet'
before declining into neglect and long years of decay in a
Northampton asylum. His letters, drawn from the whole of his adult
life until a few years before his death, provide a fascinating and
frequently moving insight into his work and thoughts, charting his
progress from youthful enthusiasm to poignant decline. Drawn from
Mark Storey's complete Oxford edition of the Letters (1986), this
edition preserves all Clare's idiosyncrasies of spelling and
punctuation. The letters are fully annotated, and the book includes
brief biographies of the major correspondents, and a chronology of
Clare's life.
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