Books
- Reading in America: Literature and Social History
- Literature and the Question of Philosophy
- Suburban Ambush: Downtown Writing and the Fiction of Insurgency
- Poetry of Exile: "Tristia", "Epistulae Ex Ponto" and "Ibis"
- The Poems
- Amer Renaissance Recon [9 Pb
- Comparative Mythology
- Slavery and the Literary Imagination
- Silas Marner (with CD-ROM)
- Homer: Poet of the Iliad
- Poetry and Its Public in Ancient Greece: From Homer to the Fifth Century
- This Hill, This Valley (American Land Classics)
- Consequences of Theory: Selected Papers from the English Institute, 1987-88 (Selected Papers from the English Institute)
- Essays Ancient and Modern
- Eclogues
- Greek Tragedy: An Introduction
- Godwins & Shelleys Pb
- The Sighted Singer: Two Works of Poetry for Readers and Writers
- Hypertext: Convergence of Contemporary Critical Theory and Technology
- Understandng Roman Inscriptns Pb
- Lord Byron's Strength: Romantic Writing and Commercial Society
- Romanticism and Contemporary Criticism: Gauss Seminar and Other Papers
- Barlowe's Guide to Fantasy
- The Office of the "Scarlet Letter" (Parallax: Re-visions of Culture & Society S.)
- What Does a Woman Want?: Reading and Sexual Difference
Average customer rating:
- A Must Own Volume
- Every teacher and school library should get this resource
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A Broken Flute: The Native Experience in Books for Children (Contemporary Native American Communities)
Doris Seale
Manufacturer: AltaMira Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General
| Native American
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Books & Reading
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Criticism & Theory
| History & Criticism
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Multicultural
| Contemporary Methods
| Education Theory
| Education
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Education
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Instruction Method
| Education
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Children's Literature Guides
| Literature
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
Similar Items:
- Lessons from Turtle Island: Native Curriculum in Early Childhood Classrooms
- Through Indian Eyes: The Native Experience in Books for Children (Contemporary American Indian Issues No. 7) (Contmeporary American Indian Issues Series Vol. 7)
- Indian Shoes
- Rain Is Not My Indian Name
- Jingle Dancer
Accessories:
- Health o Meter HDC100-01 "Grow with Me" Teddy Bear Scale for Babies and Toddlers
- philosophy hope in a jar daily moisturizer
ASIN: 0759107785 |
Book Description
A Broken Flute is a book of reviews that critically evaluate children's books about Native Americans written between the early 1900s and 2003, accompanied by stories, essays and poems from its contributors. The authors critique some 600 books by more than 500 authors, arranging titles A to Z and covering pre-school, K-12 levels, and evaluations of some adult and teacher materials. This book is a valuable resource for community and educational organizations, and a key reference for public and school libraries, and Native American collections.
Customer Reviews:
A Must Own Volume.......2007-01-19
If you are teaching children's literature to prospective teachers, Head Start staff, librarians, or others who make vital decisions about acquisition and use of appropriate books for kids, you have got to own this book. If you are teaching Native American kids, you must own this book. It critically reviews and assesses the cultural authenticity and historical accuracy of hundreds of wellknown and otherwise highly regarded children's titles of the past ten years with a particular scrutiny for the taint of misinformation, cultural theft, and lack of balance.
Every teacher and school library should get this resource.......2006-01-31
I am glad to see that today, 1/31/06, this reference book is in the top ten best selling books about American Indians at Amazon. It is filled with critical reviews of classic and popular books that fall short in their portrayals of American Indians, but it also has many powerful essays written by Native men, women, and children, and their experiences with books and schools that relegate Native people to a monolithic and long-ago existence.
As a professor in American Indian Studies, I highly recommend this book.
Average customer rating:
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Reading America: Text as Cultural Force
Matthew Guillen
Manufacturer: Academica Press,LLC
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General
| Law
| Subjects
| Books
Legal History
| Perspectives on Law
| Law
| Subjects
| Books
Legal Writing
| One-L
| Law
| Subjects
| Books
General
| History & Criticism
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Look Inside Fiction Books
| Trip
| Specialty Stores
| Books
ASIN: 193314629X |
Product Description
Is there a unique visual infrastructure that keeps and defines a culture? Dr Matthew Guillen,the distinguished professor of Anglo-American Law at the University of Paris X11,argues that American culture is built on visual modality and specifically the written word as best exemplified by the law and jurisprudence. Major American writing (Melville, James etc) as well as popular culture is discussed as a "reading".
Average customer rating:
- Entertaining, yet analytical, read
- If you read Oprah, read this
- Flawed but essential study of the Oprah Book Club
- Excellent discussion of TV media and lit criticism
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Reading With Oprah: The Book Club That Changed America
Kathleen Rooney
Manufacturer: University of Arkansas Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Popular Culture
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Anthropology
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Sociology
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
History & Criticism
| Television
| Entertainment
| Subjects
| Books
General
| History & Criticism
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
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General
| Books & Reading
| Literature & Fiction
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General
| Arts & Photography
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Look Inside Entertainment Books
| Trip
| Specialty Stores
| Books
Similar Items:
- Reading Oprah: How Oprah's Book Club Changed the Way America Reads
- Book Clubs: Women and the Uses of Reading in Everyday Life
- A Feeling for Books: The Book-of-the-Month Club, Literary Taste, and Middle-Class Desire
- Forgotten Readers: Recovering the Lost History of African American Literary Societies (New Americanists)
- Oprah Winfrey and the Glamour of Misery: An Essay on Popular Culture
ASIN: 1557287821 |
Book Description
Adored by its fans, deplored by its critics, Oprah's Book Club has been at the center of arguments about cultural authority and literary taste since its inception in 1996. Virtually everyone seems to have an opinion about this monumental institution with its revolutionary and controversial fusion of the literary, the televisual, and the commercial. READING WITH OPRAH is the first in-depth look at the phenomenon that is OBC.
Rooney combines extensive research with a lively personal voice and engaging narrative style to untangle the myths and presuppositions surrounding the club, to reveal its complex and far-reaching cultural influence, confronting head-on how the club became a crucible for the heated clash between "high" and "low" literary taste. Comprehensive and up-to-date, the book features a wide survey of recent commentary, and describes why the club ended in 2002, as well as why it resumed fourteen months later in 2003, with a new focus on "great books." Rooney also provides the most extensive analysis yet of the Oprah Winfrey-Jonathan Franzen contretemps.
Through her close examination of each of the club's selected novels, as well as personal interviews and correspondence with OBC authors, Rooney demonstrates that in its tumultous eight-year history Oprah's Book Club has occupied a place of prominence unique in the culture for which neither its supporters nor its detractors have previously given it credit.
Customer Reviews:
Entertaining, yet analytical, read.......2006-08-08
not that those things are contradictory, but I really had no idea what to expect when picking up this book. In fact, the cover and the title don't do justice to the content or the writing inside.
Instead of being simple description of the book club, how it works, or a description of Oprah, the book is an analysis of media culture in the late twentieth, early twenty-first century, told through the clear-eyed view of Rooney. And it's not that her account is unbiased but that, as with much of the best non-fiction and critical analysis, she is aware of her biases and let's the audience know and evaluate them as well.
In short, the book is very thoughtful, well-written, researchful, and interessante.
If you read Oprah, read this.......2006-04-04
I definitely recommend Kathleen Rooney's book. What is especially compelling about her approach is how she mirrors the strengths and weaknesses of OBC in her own critique. Like Oprah, she dares to walk the dubious lines between the academy, mass media, and personal commentary, risking scrutiny on all fronts. And also like Oprah, she pulls it off with confidence and humor. I appreciate Rooney's struggle to be an authority and critique authority, which is why it's perfect that she includes a healthy dose of self disclosure and makes room for her own assessments of Oprah's picks. Most importantly, perhaps, Rooney makes the point that OBC is a woman-fronted effort and it's women readers who are changing the what, who, and how America reads.
Flawed but essential study of the Oprah Book Club.......2006-01-02
Without a doubt this book fills a hole, exploring the Oprah Book Club (OBC) in its near totality. Although Rooney makes insightful points about the Club, including critical and popular reactions to it, unfortunately, she incorporates things that weaken her credibility and detract from the overall quality of her study. For example, many of her statements, though perceptive, are repeated too often, such as how Oprah fails to acknowledge her status as an intellectual, or how the TV host does not engage in the essential discussion over the high-low brow cultural divide.
Another drawback in the text is when Rooney creates a personal stratification of high to low literary quality. The exercise would have been very useful, if not for the lowest rung. In trying to save herself through the use of "it's-my-own-personal-opinion-and-many-will-likely-disagree-with-me", the author's credibility is compromised when she places comics and pornography there. The added statements that there are some good quality comics and `pornography' (I think she meant erotica?), don't remedy the inappropriateness of the choices. Comics (or graphic novels as they are more commonly called), today are not so much the cheap and pulpy mass-produced rags of yore and they've become a well-respected medium, especially in the library world.
In the section of `awful' and `unreadable' Oprah books, Rooney serves up the list of her most hated OBC selections, together with her most loved. While certainly entitled to her opinion, the point of the exercise is lost. Why bother throwing personal and subjective assessments in if they don't add anything to the study? It is unclear whether Rooney set out to write her personal adventures with the OBC, or an objective semi-academic treatise on the OBC phenomenon.
As a librarian, I wanted very badly to read this book and gain a better perspective on the book club that led to mile-long waiting lists and much buzz with my public. On many counts, despite the aforementioned criticisms, I got what I wanted. Rooney explores how television flattens discussion of books; how we can learn what the OBC taught us about taste; how the second configuration of the OBC that relies on classics addresses the criticism hurled at it from the first incarnation; how twitchy Oprah essentially made professional critics; Oprah's impact on authors, publishers and America's reading public; the whole `Franzen affair', and of course, who her readers are. The author clearly did her homework to answer all the questions any students of the Book Club would have.
Excellent discussion of TV media and lit criticism.......2005-05-07
Kathleen Rooney's _Reading with Oprah_ frames Oprah Winfrey's "Oprah's Book Club" (OBC) within the omnipresent high/low critical dichotomy pervasive throughout the American literary landscape.
Rooney's examination of the first OBC's (Part I) "flattening" of fiction into easily digestible afternoon TV tidbits highlights the challenging translation of high lit criticism into empathic, commercial, "low" literary presentation. OBC Part I's overemphasis on author biography and viewers' emotional responses deadened further investigation of plot and characterization. Oprah's later attempt, OBC Part II, counterbalanced flattening with the "high" criticism of guest scholars and online study helps. OBC II's belated accentuation on literary criticism has only magnified talk show programming's bipolar relationship between serious reflection and TV ratings. Oprah tempers a sincere invitation to delve into her favorite works against her cultivated media persona and corporate capital.
_Reading with Oprah_ treads on sacrosanct assumptions concerning TV's delivery of elite literary culture into the hands of middle America. This wonderful first work forces consideration of new literary spheres of influence far removed from the conventional wisdom of recent years.
Average customer rating:
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A History of the Book in America: Volume I: The Colonial Book in the Atlantic World (A History of the Book in America)
Manufacturer: The University of North Carolina Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Business & Investing
| Subjects
| Books
General
| United States
| Americas
| History
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Colonial Period
| United States
| Americas
| History
| Subjects
| Books
Social History
| Historical Study
| History
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Classics
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| History & Criticism
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Books & Reading
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
History of Books
| Books & Reading
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Literacy
| Books & Reading
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Publishing & Books
| Reference
| Subjects
| Books
Literacy
| Education
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Similar Items:
- Learning to Read and Write in Colonial America (Studies in Print Culture and the History of the Book)
- The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period
ASIN: 0807858269 |
Book Description
Volume 1, The Colonial Book in the Atlantic World carries the interrelated stories of publishing, writing, and reading from the beginning of the colonial period in America up to 1790. Three major themes run through the volume: the persisting connections between the book trade in the Old World and the New, evidenced in modes of intellectual and cultural exchange and the dominance of imported, chiefly English books; the gradual emergence of a competitive book trade in which newspapers were the largest form of production; and the institution of a "culture of the Word," organized around an essentially theological understanding of print, authorship, and reading, complemented by other frameworks of meaning that included the culture of republicanism.
Average customer rating:
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Revolution and the Word: The Rise of the Novel in America
Cathy N. Davidson
Manufacturer: Oxford University Press, USA
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General
| Classics
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| History & Criticism
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| British
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Books & Reading
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
| Classics
| Comic
| Contemporary
| Literary
General
| Criticism & Theory
| History & Criticism
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Similar Items:
- Sensational Designs: The Cultural Work of American Fiction, 1790-1860
- Female Quixotism: Exhibited in the Romantic Opinions and Extravagant Adventures of Dorcasina Sheldon (Early American Women Writers)
- The Letters of the Republic: Publication and the Public Sphere in Eighteenth-Century America
- The Algerine Captive: or, The Life and Adventures of Doctor Updike Underhill (Modern Library Classics)
- The Coquette (Oxford Paperback Reference)
ASIN: 0195041089 |
Book Description
Revolution and the Word is the classic study of the co-emergence of the U.S. nation and the new literary genre of the novel. The book remains the foundational study of reading, writing, and publishing in the new republic and provides a unique glimpse of the culture of early America. By looking at everything from publisher's account books to marginalia scrawled in eighteenth-century books to the novels themselves, Revolution and the Word provides an engaging social history of early American readership that is also informed by the most insightful aspects of literary theory. With a backward glance at the culture wars and prognostications for what lies ahead, the comprehensive introduction of this expanded edition reframes Revolution and the Word for a new generation of scholars. It revisits topics of dissent in the early national period, the status of the Constitution as a document designed to quell the still-burning passions of the American Revolution, and the role played by the novel in publicizing and articulating complex desires not addressed at the Constitutional Convention. Cathy N. Davidson provides readers with a survey and critique of the controversial and productive thought in cultural, social, and political theory as it has evolved during the last twenty years. This astute and learned assessment of recent developments in literary and historical scholarship, colonial and postcolonial studies, race theory, gender and sexuality theory, class studies, cultural studies, and history of the book will make Revolution and the Word as urgent for this generation as it was for its original readers in 1986.
Average customer rating:
- A student's survey of Native nonfiction and critical analysis
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The People and the Word: Reading Native Nonfiction (Indigenous Americas)
Robert Warrior
Manufacturer: Univ Of Minnesota Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| History & Criticism
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Literary Theory
| History & Criticism
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Native American
| History & Criticism
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
| Classics
| Comic
| Contemporary
| Literary
General
| Sociology
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Native American Studies
| Special Groups
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Qualifying Textbooks - Spring 2007
| Stores
| Books
Similar Items:
- American Indian Literary Nationalism
- Red on Red: Native American Literary Separatism
- The Truth About Stories: A Native Narrative (Indigenous Americas)
- Our Fire Survives the Storm: A Cherokee Literary History (Indigenous Americas)
- Toward a Native American Critical Theory
ASIN: 0816646171 |
Book Description
Much literary scholarship has been devoted to the flowering of Native American fiction and poetry in the mid-twentieth century. Yet, Robert Warrior argues, nonfiction has been the primary form used by American Indians in developing a relationship with the written word, one that reaches back much further in Native history and culture.
Focusing on autobiographical writings and critical essays, as well as communally authored and political documents, The People and the Word explores how the Native tradition of nonfiction has both encompassed and dissected Native experiences. Warrior begins by tracing a history of American Indian writing from the eighteenth century to the late twentieth century, then considers four particular moments: Pequot intellectual William Apess’s autobiographical writings from the 1820s and 1830s; the Osage Constitution of 1881; narratives from American Indian student experiences, including accounts of boarding school in the late 1880s; and modern Kiowa writer N. Scott Momaday’s essay “The Man Made of Words,” penned during the politically charged 1970s. Warrior’s discussion of Apess’s work looks unflinchingly at his unconventional life and death; he recognizes resistance to assimilation in the products of the student print shop at the Santee Normal Training School; and in the Osage Constitution, as well as in Momaday’s writing, Warrior sees reflections of their turbulent times as well as guidance for our own.
Taking a cue from Momaday’s essay, which gives voice to an imaginary female ancestor, Ko-Sahn, Warrior applies both critical skills and literary imagination to the texts. In doing so, The People and the Word provides a rich foundation for Native intellectuals’ critical work, deeply entwined with their unique experiences.
Robert Warrior is professor of English and Native American studies at the University of Oklahoma. He is author of Tribal Secrets: Recovering American Indian Intellectual Traditions (Minnesota, 1994) and coauthor, with Paul Chaat Smith, of Like a Hurricane: The Indian Movement from Alcatraz to Wounded Knee.
Customer Reviews:
A student's survey of Native nonfiction and critical analysis.......2006-04-21
Any collection strong in Native American history, culture or nonfiction in particular will want to add THE PEOPLE AND THE WORD: READING NATIVE NONFICTION: it's a literary exploration of the Native tradition of nonfiction which is accessible by both high school and college-level students, and provides an excellent survey of Native American writers and the critical and literary analysis which may be applied to their works. From making spiritual or emotional connections to learning about the wellsprings of experience which foster these works, THE PEOPLE AND THE WORD provides an excellent foundation for understanding.
Average customer rating:
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Ciphers of History: Latin American Readings for a Cultural Age (New Concepts in Latino American Cultures)
Enrico Mario Santi
Manufacturer: Palgrave Macmillan
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General
| Classics
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Hispanic
| History & Criticism
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Books & Reading
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Latin American
| Classics
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Caribbean & Latin American
| History & Criticism
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Sociology
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Hispanic American Studies
| Special Groups
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Similar Items:
- Remembering Maternal Bodies: Melancholy in Latina and Latin American Women's Writing (New Concepts in Latino American Cultures)
ASIN: 1403970467
Release Date: 2005-11-17 |
Book Description
Ciphers of History is a collection of seven classic essays written by the eminent Latin Americanist Enrico Mario Sant, compiled here in a single volume for the first time. Sant covers a broad range of topics in Latin American poetry, narrative, film, and intellectual history, with one brief excursion into Peninsular subject-matter: the Spanish Generation of 98's response to Spain's loss of Cuba in the Spanish-American War of 1898. The collection is defined by a bracing critique of dominant trends in current critical practice, and advocacy of an alternative methodology focused on the retrieval of local knowledge. Sant stresses reading as opposed to theory, and employs the notion of the "cipher" as a figure for "the ultimate ambivalence of interpretation." The essays are tied together by this common approach, which acts as both incisive challenge and demanding blue-print for the field of Latin American literary and cultural studies.
Average customer rating:
- A Carnival of Sensations in the Public Sphere
- Culture as Circus
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Carnival on the Page: Popular Print Media in Antebellum America
Isabelle Lehuu
Manufacturer: University of North Carolina Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Antebellum
| 19th Century
| United States
| Americas
| History
| Subjects
| Books
General
| United States
| Americas
| History
| Subjects
| Books
Social History
| Historical Study
| History
| Subjects
| Books
18th Century
| History & Criticism
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
19th Century
| History & Criticism
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| History & Criticism
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Books & Reading
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
History of Books
| Books & Reading
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Movements & Periods
| History & Criticism
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
| Arthurian Romance
| Beat Generation
| General
| Gothic Revival
| Medieval
| Modernism
| Postmodernism
| Renaissance
| Romanticism
| Surrealism
| Victorian
Anthropology
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
| Cultural
| Ethnobotany
| Ethnology
| Evolution
| General
| History & Philosophy
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| Primitive
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General
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General
| Bibliographies & Indexes
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General
| Education
| Professional & Technical
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| Books
Similar Items:
- Highbrow/Lowbrow: The Emergence of Cultural Hierarchy in America (The William E. Massey Sr. Lectures in the History of American Civilization)
ASIN: 0807825212 |
Customer Reviews:
A Carnival of Sensations in the Public Sphere.......2005-06-18
This innovative book presents a feast of imagery from the exuberant print culture of the antebellum period. The author investigates the new penny press, the giant newsprint editions, gift books, the "lady's" books, and advice literature aimed primarily at youth. The new reading materials shared a festive and transgressive quality, a carnivalesque tone. It luxuriated in the first naturalistic mass illustrations of the human body, and Lehuu has selected a remarkable array of illustrations that are worth the price of the book by themselves. She rejects the argument that the popular prints created a consensus of national symbols and rites that tended to unify the American people, and argues that the prints instead reflected the class anxieties of an emergent working class and the elites who worried about what they did after work. Workers whose status was declining were most attracted to the cheapest new print media, and the country's cultural elite fretted that the publishers appealed only to the baser instincts of the common people.
Culture as Circus.......2000-04-16
In Carnival on the Page, Isabelle Lehuu argues that antebellum America was a 'liminal era' situated uneasily between the restrained republicanism of the early national period and the soulless commercialism of the late nineteenth century. Drawing on the theories of ritual anthropology, Lehuu contends that this 'betweenness' manifested itself in a vibrant, carnivalesque, and subversive print culture. Focussing on genres that pushed the definition of the book, Lehuu offers analyses of the sensational penny press, mammoth news sheets, gift books, and sentimental magazines. Her theory is that each form reflected the proliferating diversity of antebellum culture and refused to be constrained by traditional forms of authority. Although Lehuu's style can be ponderous at times and her contentions a little on the speculative side, this book will appeal to historians, literary critics, and cultural theorists for its subject matter and suggestive approach.
Average customer rating:
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Reading in America: Literature and Social History
Manufacturer: The Johns Hopkins University Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| United States
| Americas
| History
| Subjects
| Books
Social History
| Historical Study
| History
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Classics
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Literary Theory
| History & Criticism
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Books & Reading
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
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History of Books
| Books & Reading
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Qualifying Textbooks - Spring 2007
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Similar Items:
- Perspectives on American Book History: Artifacts and Commentary (Studies in Print Culture and the History of the Book series)
- Revolution and the Word: The Rise of the Novel in America
- Forgotten Readers: Recovering the Lost History of African American Literary Societies (New Americanists)
- American Literature and the Culture of Reprinting, 1834-1853 (Material Texts)
- Book Clubs: Women and the Uses of Reading in Everyday Life
ASIN: 0801838002 |
Average customer rating:
- Sexuality studies applied to Spanish-language writing
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Reading and Writing the Ambiente: Queer Sexualities in Latino, Latin American, and Spanish Culture
Manufacturer: University of Wisconsin Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
History
| Gay & Lesbian
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Nonfiction
| Gay & Lesbian
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Classics
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Literary Theory
| History & Criticism
| United States
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Essays
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
| Classics
| Comic
| Contemporary
| Literary
Latin American
| Classics
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Sociology
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Culture
| Sociology
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Lesbian Studies
| Special Groups
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Minority Studies
| Special Groups
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Similar Items:
- Queer Latinidad: Identity Practices, Discursive Spaces (Sexual Cultures Series)
ASIN: 0299167844 |
Book Description
In this dynamic collection of essays, many leading literary scholars trace gay and lesbian themes in Latin American, Hispanic, and U.S. Latino literary and cultural texts. Reading and Writing the Ambiente is consciously ambitious and far-ranging, historically as well as geographically. It includes discussions of texts from as early as the seventeenth century to writings of the late twentieth century. Reading and Writing the Ambiente also underscores the ways in which lesbian and gay self-representation in Hispanic texts differs from representations in Anglo-American texts. The contributors demonstrate that, unlike the emphasis on the individual in Anglo- American sexual identity-Latino, Spanish, and Latin American sexual identity is produced in the surrounding culture and community, in the ambiente. As one of the first collections of its kind, Reading and Writing the Ambiente is expressive of the next wave of gay Hispanic and Latin scholarship. "North American and European queers have assigned themselves the roles of 'universal' queer subjects. Reading and Writing the Ambiente insightfully challenges that bias. This volume joins and significantly contributes to an emergent wave of queer critique that is calibrated to look beyond the borders that queer theory has set up for itself."-José Esteban Muñoz, author of Disidentifications: Queers of Color and the Performance of Politics "Reading and Writing the Ambiente will be of interest to scholars of Spanish, Latin American, and Latino literatures and cultural studies, as well as to scholars in queer studies beyond the geographical and linguistic boundaries of Hispanism."-Amy Kaminsky, University of Minnesota
Customer Reviews:
Sexuality studies applied to Spanish-language writing.......2002-03-17
There's a difference between "Spanish" and "Latino." Anthologies that talk about homoerotic stuff in old Spain tend to be boring and irrelevant compared to the great cultural works coming out from gay and lesbian Latinos. Books like "Entiendes?" and "The Hispanic Homograph" annoy me compared to great stuff like Manrique's "Eminent Maricones" or Munoz's "Disidentifications. Unfortunately, this book had too much of the yucko former and not enough of the cool latter.
The purpose of the authors is that sexuality studies of "Hispanic" texts must be done more and is quite worthwhile. The book has good representation of men and women. It has a good article on Reinaldo Arenas. This will probably be useful to Spanish literature majors, but not many others.
Final comment: please forgive the essentialism coming. Both editors mention their opposite-sex spouses. So if I'm reading this correctly, the editors are straight people who find queer theory useful. In this way, they prove that the Eve Sedgwicks of the world do not just discuss English-language literature. This book shows that gay studies can be useful to straights.
I'm not too impressed with this book, but that's not to totally disparage it.
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