0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 17 of 17 matches in All Departments

Antipodean America - Australasia and the Constitution of U. S. Literature (Hardcover): Paul Giles Antipodean America - Australasia and the Constitution of U. S. Literature (Hardcover)
Paul Giles
R2,257 Discovery Miles 22 570 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

A sweeping study that spans two continents and over three hundred years of literary history, Antipodean America argues that images of Australasia as an imagined "end of the earth" establishes the presence of an understudied historical and global consciousness, oriented toward the Pacific, in American literature. Paul Giles shows how places like Australia and New Zealand become the silent other whose likenesses to the US induce condescension, fear, paranoia, envy, rivalry, and narcissistic appropriation. The American engagement with Australasia, Giles demonstrates, has been constant since the eighteenth century and it is evinced in works by the most canonical figures in US literary history. Reading a range of works by figures like Benjamin Franklin, Herman Melville, Emily Dickinson, Mark Twain, Raymond Chandler, and John Ashbery, alongside writers like Miles Franklin, Peter Carey, and J.M. Coetzee, Antipodean America provides a welcome transnational perspective that will redefine our perception of what constitutes American literature.

Atlantic Republic - The American Tradition in English Literature (Hardcover, New): Paul Giles Atlantic Republic - The American Tradition in English Literature (Hardcover, New)
Paul Giles
R5,942 Discovery Miles 59 420 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Atlantic Republic traces the legacy of the United States both as a place and as an idea in the work of English writers from 1776 to the present day. Seeing the disputes of the Reformation as a precursor to this transatlantic divide, it argues that America has operated since the Revolution as a focal point for various traditions of dissent within English culture. By ranging over writers from Richard Price and Susanna Rowson in the 1790s to Angela Carter and Salman Rushdie at the turn of the twenty-first century, the book argues that America haunts the English literary tradition as a parallel space where ideology and aesthetics are configured differently. Consequently, it suggests, many of the key episodes in British history--parliamentary reform in the 1830s, the imperial designs of the Victorian era, the twentieth-century conflict with fascism, the advance of globalization since 1980--have been shaped by implicit dialogues with American cultural models. Rather than simply reinforcing the benign myth of a "special relationship," Paul Giles considers how various English writers over the past 200 years have engaged with America for various complicated reasons: its promise of political republicanism (Byron, Mary Shelley); its emphasis on religious disestablishment (Clough, Gissing); its prospect of pastoral regeneration (Ruxton, Lawrence); its vision of scientific futurism (Huxley, Ballard). The book also analyzes the complex cultural relations between Britain and the United States around the time of the Second World War, suggesting that writers such as Wodehouse, Isherwood, and Auden understood the United States and Germany to offer alternative versions of the kind of technologicalmodernity that appeared equally hostile to traditional forms of English culture. The book ends with a consideration of ways in which the canon of English literature might appear in a different light if seen from a transnational rather than a familiar national perspective.

Antipodean America - Australasia and the Constitution of U. S. Literature (Paperback): Paul Giles Antipodean America - Australasia and the Constitution of U. S. Literature (Paperback)
Paul Giles
R1,104 Discovery Miles 11 040 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Although North America and Australasia occupy opposite ends of the earth, they have never been that far from each other conceptually. The United States and Australia both began as British colonies and mutual entanglements continue today, when contemporary cultures of globalization have brought them more closely into juxtaposition. Taking this transpacific kinship as his focus, Paul Giles presents a sweeping study that spans two continents and over three hundred years of literary history to consider the impact of Australia and New Zealand on the formation of U.S. literature. Early American writers such as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Joel Barlow and Charles Brockden Brown found the idea of antipodes to be a creative resource, but also an alarming reminder of Great Britain's increasing sway in the Pacific. The southern seas served as inspiration for narratives by Washington Irving, Edgar Allan Poe, and Herman Melville. For African Americans such as Harriet Jacobs, Australia represented a haven from slavery during the gold rush era, while for E.D.E.N. Southworth its convict legacy offered an alternative perspective on the British class system. In the 1890s, Henry Adams and Mark Twain both came to Australasia to address questions of imperial rivalry and aesthetic topsy-turvyness. The second half of this study considers how Australia's political unification through Federation in 1901 significantly altered its relationship to the United States. New modes of transport and communication drew American visitors, including novelist Jack London. At the same time, Americans associated Australia and New Zealand with various kinds of utopian social reform, particularly in relation to gender politics, a theme Giles explores in William Dean Howells, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, and Miles Franklin. He also considers how American modernism in New York was inflected by the Australasian perspectives of Lola Ridge and Christina Stead, and how Australian modernism was in turn shaped by American styles of iconoclasm. After World War II, Giles examines how the poetry of Karl Shapiro, Louis Simpson, Yusef Komunyakaa, and others was influenced by their direct experience of Australia. He then shifts to post-1945 fiction, where the focus extends from Irish-American cultural politics (Raymond Chandler, Thomas Keneally) to the paradoxes of exile (Shirley Hazzard, Peter Carey) and the structural inversions of postmodernism and posthumanism (Salman Rushdie, Donna Haraway). Ranging from figures like John Ledyard to John Ashbery, from Emily Dickinson to Patricia Piccinini and J. M. Coetzee, Antipodean America is a truly epic work of transnational literary history.

Hart Crane - The Contexts of "The Bridge" (Paperback): Paul Giles Hart Crane - The Contexts of "The Bridge" (Paperback)
Paul Giles
R1,031 Discovery Miles 10 310 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

When Hart Crane's epic poem The Bridge was published in 1930, it was generally judged a failure. Critics said the poet had unwisely attempted to create a mystical synthesis of modern America out of inadequate materials. Crane himself, who committed suicide in 1932, did little to correct this impression; and although the poet's reputation has fluctuated over the past fifty years, many people still find The Bridge unsatisfactory. In this analysis of Crane's long poem, Paul Giles demonstrates that the author was consciously constructing his Bridge out of a huge number of puns and paradoxes, most of which have never been noticed by Crane's readers. Dr Giles shows how Crane was directly influenced by the early work of James Joyce; how the composition of The Bridge ran parallel to the first serialisation of Finnegans Wake in Paris; and how The Bridge is the first great work of the 'Revolution of the Word' movement, predating the final published version of Finnegans Wake by nine years.

American Catholic Arts and Fictions - Culture, Ideology, Aesthetics (Paperback): Paul Giles American Catholic Arts and Fictions - Culture, Ideology, Aesthetics (Paperback)
Paul Giles
R1,381 R1,299 Discovery Miles 12 990 Save R82 (6%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

In American Catholic Arts and Fictions, Paul Giles describes how secular transformations of religious ideas have helped to shape the style and substance of works by American writers, filmmakers, and artists from a Catholic background, such as Orestes Brownson, Theodore Dreiser, Mary McCarthy, Robert Mapplethorpe, Alfred Hitchcock, and Robert Altman. The book also explores how Catholicism was represented and mythologized by other American writers. By highlighting the recurring themes and preoccupations of American Catholic fictions, Giles challenges many of the accepted ideas about the centrality of romanticism to the American literary canon. He reconstructs the different social, historical, and philosophical contexts from which aesthetics in the "Catholic" tradition has emerged, and he shows how these stand in an oblique relationship to the assumptions of the American Enlightenment.

Transatlantic Insurrections - British Culture and the Formation of American Literature, 173-186 (Paperback): Paul Giles Transatlantic Insurrections - British Culture and the Formation of American Literature, 173-186 (Paperback)
Paul Giles
R819 Discovery Miles 8 190 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

Selected by Choice magazine as an Outstanding Academic Title Paul Giles traces the paradoxical relations between English and American literature from 1730 through 1860, suggesting how the formation of a literary tradition in each national culture was deeply dependent upon negotiation with its transatlantic counterpart. Using the American Revolution as the fulcrum of his argument, Giles describes how the impulse to go beyond conventions of British culture was crucial in the establishment of a distinct identity for American literature. Similarly, he explains the consolidation of British cultural identity partly as a response to the need to suppress the memory and consequences of defeat in the American revolutionary wars. Giles ranges over neglected American writers such as Mather Byles and the Connecticut Wits as well as better-known figures like Franklin, Jefferson, Irving, and Hawthorne. He reads their texts alongside those of British authors such as Pope, Richardson, Equiano, Austen, and Trollope. Taking issue with more established utopian narratives of American literature, Transatlantic Insurrections analyzes how elements of blasphemous, burlesque humor entered into the making of the subject.

The Planetary Clock - Antipodean Time and Spherical Postmodern Fictions (Hardcover): Paul Giles The Planetary Clock - Antipodean Time and Spherical Postmodern Fictions (Hardcover)
Paul Giles
R3,743 Discovery Miles 37 430 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The theme of The Planetary Clock is the representation of time in postmodern culture and the way temporality as a global phenomenon manifests itself differently across an antipodean axis. To trace postmodernism in an expansive spatial and temporal arc, from its formal experimentation in the 1960s to environmental concerns in the twenty-first century, is to describe a richer and more complex version of this cultural phenomenon. Exploring different scales of time from a Southern Hemisphere perspective, with a special emphasis on issues of Indigeneity and the Anthropocene, The Planetary Clock offers a wide-ranging, revisionist account of postmodernism, reinterpreting literature, film, music, and visual art of the post-1960 period within a planetary framework. By bringing the culture of Australia and New Zealand into dialogue with other Western narratives, it suggests how an antipodean impulse, involving the transposition of the world into different spatial and temporal dimensions, has long been an integral (if generally occluded) aspect of postmodernism. Taking its title from a Florentine clock designed in 1510 to measure worldly time alongside the rotation of the planets, The Planetary Clock ranges across well-known American postmodernists (John Barth, Toni Morrison) to more recent science fiction writers (Octavia Butler, Richard Powers), while bringing the US tradition into juxtaposition with both its English (Philip Larkin, Ian McEwan) and Australian (Les Murray, Alexis Wright) counterparts. By aligning cultural postmodernism with music (Messiaen, Ligeti, Birtwistle), the visual arts (Hockney, Blackman, Fiona Hall), and cinema (Rohmer, Haneke, Tarantino), this volume enlarges our understanding of global postmodernism for the twenty-first century.

American Catholic Arts and Fictions - Culture, Ideology, Aesthetics (Hardcover): Paul Giles American Catholic Arts and Fictions - Culture, Ideology, Aesthetics (Hardcover)
Paul Giles
R4,124 Discovery Miles 41 240 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Paul Giles describes how secular transformations of religious ideas have helped to shape the style and substance of works by American writers, filmmakers and artists from Catholic backgrounds such as Orestes Brownson, Theodore Dreiser, Mary McCarthy, Robert Mapplethorpe, Alfred Hitchcock and Robert Altman. The book also explores how Catholicism was represented and mythologized by other American writers. By highlighting the recurring themes and preoccupations of American Catholic fictions, Giles challenges many of the accepted ideas about the centrality of Romanticism to the American literary canon. He reconstructs the different social, historical, and philosophical contexts from which aesthetics in the "Catholic" tradition have emerged, and shows how these stand in an oblique relationship to the assumptions of the American Enlightenment.

The Global Remapping of American Literature (Paperback): Paul Giles The Global Remapping of American Literature (Paperback)
Paul Giles
R1,255 Discovery Miles 12 550 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

This book charts how the cartographies of American literature as an institutional category have varied radically across different times and places. Arguing that American literature was consolidated as a distinctively nationalist entity only in the wake of the U.S. Civil War, Paul Giles identifies this formation as extending until the beginning of the Reagan presidency in 1981. He contrasts this with the more amorphous boundaries of American culture in the eighteenth century, and with ways in which conditions of globalization at the turn of the twenty-first century have reconfigured the parameters of the subject. In light of these fluctuating conceptions of space, Giles suggests new ways of understanding the shifting territory of American literary history. ranging from Cotton Mather to David Foster Wallace, and from Henry Wadsworth Longfellow to Zora Neale Hurston. Giles considers why European medievalism and Native American prehistory were crucial to classic nineteenth-century authors such as Emerson, Hawthorne, and Melville. He discusses how twentieth-century technological innovations, such as air travel, affected representations of the national domain in the texts of F. Scott Fitzgerald and Gertrude Stein. And he analyzes how regional projections of the South and the Pacific Northwest helped to shape the work of writers such as William Gilmore Simms, Jose Marti, Elizabeth Bishop, and William Gibson. Bringing together literary analysis, political history, and cultural geography, The Global Remapping of American Literature reorients the subject for the transnational era.

Richwood (Paperback): Paul Giles Richwood (Paperback)
Paul Giles
R289 Discovery Miles 2 890 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
Atlantic Republic - The American Tradition in English Literature (Paperback): Paul Giles Atlantic Republic - The American Tradition in English Literature (Paperback)
Paul Giles
R1,290 Discovery Miles 12 900 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Atlantic Republic traces the legacy of the United States both as a place and as an idea in the work of English writers from 1776 to the present day. Seeing the disputes of the Reformation as a precursor to this transatlantic divide, it argues that America has operated since the Revolution as a focal point for various traditions of dissent within English culture. By ranging over writers from Richard Price and Susanna Rowson in the 1790s to Angela Carter and Salman Rushdie at the turn of the twenty-first century, the book argues that America haunts the English literary tradition as a parallel space where ideology and aesthetics are configured differently. Consequently, it suggests, many of the key episodes in British history-parliamentary reform in the 1830s, the imperial designs of the Victorian era, the twentieth-century conflict with fascism, the advance of globalization since 1980-have been shaped by implicit dialogues with American cultural models. Rather than simply reinforcing the benign myth of a 'special relationship', Paul Giles considers how various English writers over the past 200 years have engaged with America for various complicated reasons: its promise of political republicanism (Byron, Mary Shelley); its emphasis on religious disestablishment (Clough, Gissing); its prospect of pastoral regeneration (Ruxton, Lawrence); its vision of scientific futurism (Huxley, Ballard). The book also analyses the complex cultural relations between Britain and the United States around the time of the Second World War, suggesting that writers such as Wodehouse, Isherwood, and Auden understood the United States and Germany to offer alternative versions of the kind of technological modernity that appeared equally hostile to traditional forms of English culture. The book ends with a consideration of ways in which the canon of English literature might appear in a different light if seen from a transnational rather than a familiar national perspective.

Backgazing: Reverse Time in Modernist Culture (Hardcover): Paul Giles Backgazing: Reverse Time in Modernist Culture (Hardcover)
Paul Giles
R2,697 Discovery Miles 26 970 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This volume trace ways in which time is represented in reverse forms throughout modernist culture, from the beginning of the twentieth century until the decade after World War II. Though modernism is often associated with revolutionary or futurist directions, this book argues instead that a retrograde dimension is embedded within it. By juxtaposing the literature of Europe and North America with that of Australia and New Zealand, it suggests how this antipodean context serves to defamiliarize and reconceptualize normative modernist understandings of temporal progression. Backgazing thus moves beyond the treatment of a specific geographical periphery as another margin on the expanding field of 'New Modernist Studies'. Instead, it offers a systematic investigation of the transformative effect of retrograde dimensions on our understanding of canonical modernist texts. The title, 'backgazing', is taken from Australian poet Robert G. FitzGerald's 1938 poem 'Essay on Memory', and it epitomizes how the cultural history of modernism can be restructured according to a radically different discursive map. Backgazing intellectually reconfigures US and European modernism within a planetary orbit in which the literature of Australia and the Southern Hemisphere, far from being merely an annexed margin, can be seen substantively to change the directional compass of modernism more generally. By reading canonical modernists such as James Joyce and T. S. Eliot alongside marginalized writers such as Nancy Cunard and others and relatively neglected authors from Australia and New Zealand, this book offers a revisionist cultural history of modernist time, one framed by a recognition of how its measurement is modulated across geographical space.

Wit, wisdom, and philosophy of Jean Paul Fred. Richter (Paperback): Jean Paul Wit, wisdom, and philosophy of Jean Paul Fred. Richter (Paperback)
Jean Paul; Edited by Giles P. Hawley
R542 Discovery Miles 5 420 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
Wit, Wisdom, and Philosophy (Hardcover): 1763-1825 Jean Paul, Giles P. Hawley Wit, Wisdom, and Philosophy (Hardcover)
1763-1825 Jean Paul, Giles P. Hawley
R839 Discovery Miles 8 390 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
The Gentleman's Guide to Cool - Clothing, Grooming & Etiquette (Paperback): Paul Giles The Gentleman's Guide to Cool - Clothing, Grooming & Etiquette (Paperback)
Paul Giles
R526 Discovery Miles 5 260 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
Wit, Wisdom, And Philosophy Of Jean Paul Fred. Richter (1884) (Paperback): Jean Paul Wit, Wisdom, And Philosophy Of Jean Paul Fred. Richter (1884) (Paperback)
Jean Paul; Edited by Giles P. Hawley
R722 Discovery Miles 7 220 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!

Wit, Wisdom, And Philosophy Of Jean Paul Fred. Richter (1884) (Paperback): Jean Paul Wit, Wisdom, And Philosophy Of Jean Paul Fred. Richter (1884) (Paperback)
Jean Paul; Edited by Giles P. Hawley
R722 Discovery Miles 7 220 Ships in 18 - 22 working days
Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Global Health Nursing - Building and…
Michele Upvall, Jeanne Leffers Paperback R2,453 R1,819 Discovery Miles 18 190
Starting with Berkeley
Nick Jones Hardcover R3,336 Discovery Miles 33 360
Clinical Pharmacokinetic and…
Tony K.L. Kiang, Kyle John Wilby, … Hardcover R2,020 R1,795 Discovery Miles 17 950
Self and Substance in Leibniz
Marc Elliott Bobro Hardcover R1,485 Discovery Miles 14 850
Plasma Fluidized Bed
Changming Du, Rongliang Qiu, … Hardcover R3,225 Discovery Miles 32 250
Entertaining Judgment - The Afterlife in…
Greg Garrett Hardcover R924 Discovery Miles 9 240
Intelligent Decision-making Models for…
Zhaoxia Guo Hardcover R3,441 Discovery Miles 34 410
Christ Meets Me Everywhere - Augustine's…
Michael Cameron Hardcover R3,071 Discovery Miles 30 710
Landslide Hazards, Risks, and Disasters
John F. Shroder Paperback R3,727 Discovery Miles 37 270
Hex - Darkland Tales
Jenni Fagan Paperback R269 R228 Discovery Miles 2 280

 

Partners