The Weeping Woman on the Streets of Prague

The Weeping Woman on the Streets of Prague
Author: Sylvie Germain
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 136
Release: 1993
Genre: Art
ISBN: UOM:39015032446307

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The Weeping Woman on Streets of Prague

The Weeping Woman on Streets of Prague
Author: Sylvie Germain
Publsiher: City Noir
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2010-05-20
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1903517737

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a haunting classic Madeleine Kingsley in She Magazine An intricate, finely crafted and polished tale, The Weeping Woman on the Streets of Prague brings magic-realism to the dimly lit streets of Prague. Through the squares and alleys a woman walks, the embodiment of human pity, sorrow, death. Everyone she passes is touched by her, and Germain skilfully creates an intense mood and feel in her attempt to produce a spiritual map of Prague. The Observer

Prague Palimpsest

Prague Palimpsest
Author: Alfred Thomas
Publsiher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 222
Release: 2010-10-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780226795416

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A city of immense literary mystique, Prague has inspired writers across the centuries with its beauty, cosmopolitanism, and tragic history. Envisioning the ancient city in central Europe as a multilayered text, or palimpsest, that has been constantly revised and rewritten—from the medieval and Renaissance chroniclers who legitimized the city’s foundational origins to the modernists of the early twentieth century who established its reputation as the new capital of the avant-garde—Alfred Thomas argues that Prague has become a paradoxical site of inscription and effacement, of memory and forgetting, a utopian link to the prewar and pre-Holocaust European past and a dystopia of totalitarian amnesia. Considering a wide range of writers, including the city’s most famous son, Franz Kafka, Prague Palimpsest reassesses the work of poets and novelists such as Bohumil Hrabal, Milan Kundera, Gustav Meyrink, Jan Neruda, Vítĕzslav Nezval, and Rainer Maria Rilke and engages with other famous authors who “wrote” Prague, including Guillaume Apollinaire, Ingeborg Bachmann, Albert Camus, Paul Celan, and W. G. Sebald. The result is a comparative, interdisciplinary study that helps to explain why Prague—more than any other major European city—has haunted the cultural and political imagination of the West.

Prague

Prague
Author: Richard Burton,Richard D. E. Burton
Publsiher: Signal Books
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2003
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1902669630

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A treasure house of Gothic, baroque and modernist architecture, Prague is also a city of icons and symbols: statues, saints and signs reveal a turbulent history of religious and cultural conflict. As Kafka's nightmare city and home of the Good Soldier Svejk, the Czech capital also produced two of the twentieth century's emblematic writers. Richard Burton explores this metropolis of theatrical allusion, in which politics and drama have always been intertwined. His interpretation of the city's cultural past and present encompasses opera and rock music, puppetry and cinema, surrealism and socialist realism.

The Rhetoric of Affirmative Resistance

The Rhetoric of Affirmative Resistance
Author: Julian Wolfreys
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 245
Release: 1997-09-12
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781349256990

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In this wide-ranging, challenging theoretical study, Julian Wolfreys offers close readings of films, novels and poetry in order to draw attention to the ways in which texts resist acts of reading by performing their own idiomatic, wayward identities. Looking at the construction of identity in Lewis Carroll, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, James Joyce, Maya Deren, Sylvie Germain, Jacques Derrida, Michel Deguy, and George Eliot, Wolfreys asks the reader to reassess the textual performance of identity by attending to a rhetoric which is simultaneously both resistant to mastery and affirmative of dissonance.

Deconstruction Derrida

Deconstruction   Derrida
Author: Julian Wolfreys
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 250
Release: 1998-06-22
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781349266180

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Deconstruction - Derrida contests the notion that what Jacques Derrida does can be turned into a theory for literary interpretation. It also questions the idea that there is a critical methodology called deconstruction which can be applied to literary texts in a programmatic fashion. In this introductory study to the work of Jacques Derrida, Julian Wolfreys introduces the reader to a range of Derrida's interests and concerns, while offering readings, informed by Derrida's thought, of canonical and less well-known literary works.

Women s Writing in Contemporary France

Women s Writing in Contemporary France
Author: Gill Rye,Michael Worton
Publsiher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2002
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0719062276

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This introduction to and analysis of women's writing in contemporary France includes both new writers of the 1990s and their more established counterparts. It situates these authors and their texts at the centre of the trends and issues concerning modern French literary production.

Solitudes of the Workplace

Solitudes of the Workplace
Author: Elvi W Whittaker
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 331
Release: 2015
Genre: Electronic books
ISBN: 9780773546332

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Solitudes of the Workplace focuses on experiences of marginalization, uncertainty and segregation created by the hierarchical structures of categories in universities and by gendered identities. Studying a wider range of women's roles in universities than prior research, the experiences of support staff, senior administrators, researchers, non-academic administrators, and contract teachers are added to those of faculty and students. The essays show how attempts to introduce new knowledge are manoeuvered and the resistance this process can encounter, as well as the ways in which institutional policies can blur and change identities. Addressing longstanding issues such as the entanglement of gender and the assessment of merit, attention is also given to how new identities are claimed and successfully projected. Essays presenting workers' points of view reveal the confusion that occurs when official policy and everyday knowledge conflict, when processes like tenure and other status changes create troublesome realities, and when it becomes routine to experience status denigration. Within the social order of the university and its existing boundaries, gender issues of past decades sometimes surface, but all too often remain an unspoken presence. Solitudes of the Workplace is a revealing look at the isolating experiences and inequities inherent in these institutional environments.