Documents pour «University of Exeter Press»

Documents pour "University of Exeter Press"
Affiche du document Partisan Politics

Partisan Politics

Jon Rosebank

2h58min30

  • Histoire
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
238 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 2h58min.
New understandings of the middle order and of the post-1688 English Parliament have shifted the focus from Westminster to the constituencies in the study of eighteenth-century politics. It was the towns, and especially the smaller parliamentary boroughs, that set much of the legislative agenda and which defined partisanship. This is also where religious tension was most intense and enduring. Yet there has never been a thoroughgoing comparative study of small-town economy, religion, government and politics. Deep in the archives, the history of a clutch of towns in south-west England in the early years of the eighteenth century offers revelatory insights. Their diverse economic structure and religious divisions made these towns extraordinarily difficult to govern, while late Augustan partisanship spread into the streets and taverns, threatening urban order. This precipitated heady local realignments, with three or even four factions in each place cutting across Whig and Tory lines in the pursuit of consensus. In this intensely urban politics, government patronage was peripheral; area gentry were drawn in but had little control. The impact of this many-sided partisanship on national politics was profound. Building a clearer picture of significant change around the time of the Hanoverian accession, this book proposes a fresh approach both to the study of early modern politics and of towns far beyond its immediate region. It will be an important asset to scholars and students of both.  Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations   Chapter 1: Introduction—a new understanding of towns and their politics The perspective of the middling sort Local government Resistance to interference Partisanship Religion and party In search of stability The research deficit in smaller towns   PART 1: THE URBAN COMMUNITY   Chapter 2: Economy and community— the key contexts The major industries: shipping The major industries: textiles Beyond the major industries The distribution of wealth Other solidarities The relationship between economy, society and politics   Chapter 3: The significance of the Church The structure of dissent Dissent and local government The Established Church The challenge to order   Chapter 4: Town government The structure of town government Who served? Was town government effective? The threat to good government   PART 2: THE POLITICAL PROCESS Chapter 5: Government patronage The Excise service The Customs service Land Tax, Post Office, Army The Admiralty The patronage process   Chapter 6: The politics of leading townsmen and the gentry Bridgwater: the humiliation of the Duke of Chandos Plymouth: consensus and the failure of Sir John Rogers Totnes: Amyites, Buckleyites and George Treby Dartmouth: Holdsworth and Treby—amicitia perpetua Tavistock: the third force Taunton: the feud between council and meeting houses Tiverton: the role of the Church party Partisan politics   Chapter 7: The politics of the wider society Taunton: mobs and voters Bridgwater: popular Jacobitism Totnes and Dartmouth: ‘Confidents and Intimados’ at the Hole in the Wall Tavistock: fringe voters Plymouth: the role of the freemen Tiverton: playing with popular feeling The broken cheese beam   Chapter 8: Wider contexts Regions The longer period Where next?   Bibliography Manuscript sources Printed sources Contemporary Modern works   Index
Accès libre
Affiche du document Going to the Movies

Going to the Movies

6h13min30

  • Sciences humaines et sociales
  • Youscribe plus
498 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 6h13min.
This book analyses the diverse historical and geographical circumstances in which audiences have viewed American cinema. It looks at cinema audiences ranging from Manhattan nickelodeons to the modern suburban megaplex, and from provincial, small-town or rural America to the shanty towns of South Africa. Going to the Movies studies the social and cultural history of movie audiences. Ranging broadly across historical time and geographical place, it analyses the role of movie theatres in local communities, the links between film and other entertainment media, non-theatrical exhibition and trends arising from the globalisation of audiences. There is an emphasis on movie-going outside the American North-East, and several chapters analyse the complexities of race and race formation in relation to cinema attendance.Introduction, Richard Maltby and Melvyn Stokes Part 1: Studies of Local Cinema Exhibition 1. Race, Religion, and Rusticity: Relocating U. S. Film History, Robert C. Allen 2. Tri-racial Theaters in Robeson County, North Carolina (1896-1940), Christopher J. McKenna 3. The White in the Race Movie Audience, Jane Gaines 4. Sundays in Norfolk: Toward a Protestant Utopia Through Film Exhibition in Norfolk, Virginia, 1910-1920, Terry Lindvall, C. S. Lewis 5. Patchwork Maps of Movie-Going, 1911-1913, Richard Abel, Robert Altman 6. Leshono habo' bimuving piktshurs (Next year at the Moving Pictures): Cinema and social change in the Jewish immigrant community, Judith Thissen 7. 'Four Hours of Hootin' and Hollerin": Moviegoing and Everyday Life Outside the Movie Palace, Jeffrey Klenotic 8. Cinema-going in the United States in the mid-1930s: A Study Based on the Variety Dataset, Mark Glancy and John Sedgwick 9. Race Houses, Jim Crow Roosts, and Lily White Palaces: desegregating the Motion Picture Theater, Thomas Doherty Part II: Other Cinema: Alternatives to Theatrical Exhibition 10. The Reel of the Month Club: 16mm Projectors, Home Theaters and Film Libraries in the 19320s, Haidee Wasson 11. Early Art Cinema in the U.S.: Symon Gould and the Little Cinema Movement of the 1920s, Anne Morey 12. Free Talking Picture - Every Farmer is Welcome: Non-theatrical Film and Everyday Life in Rural America during the 1930s, Gregory A. Waller 13. Cinema's Shadow: Reconsidering Non-Theatrical Exhibition, Barbara Klinger Part III: Hollywood Movies in Broader Perspective: Audiences at Home and Abroad 14. Changing Images of Movie Audiences, Richard Butsch 15. 'Healthy Films from America': The emergence of a Catholic film mass movement in Belgium and the realm of Hollywood, 1928-1939, Daniel Biltereyst 16. The child audience and the 'horrific' film in 1930s Britain, Annette Kuhn 17. Hollywood in Vernacular: Translation and Cross-Cultural Reception of American Films in Turkey, Ahmet Gurata 18. Cowboy Modern: African Audiences, Hollywood Films, and Visions of the West, Charles Ambler 19. 'Opening Everywhere': Multiplexes and the Speed of Cinema Culture, Charles R. Acland 20. 'Cinema Comes to Life at the Cornerhouse, Nottingham': 'American' Exhibition, Local Politics and Global Culture in the Construction of the Urban Entertainment Centre, Mark Jancovich    
Accès libre
Affiche du document Victory Over the Sun

Victory Over the Sun

4h33min00

  • Sciences humaines et sociales
  • Youscribe plus
364 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 4h33min.
The Futurist opera Victory over the Sun, first staged in 1913 in St Petersburg, was a key event of the Russian avant-garde, notorious for its libretto, its unconventional score and its pioneering abstract sets and costumes designed by Kazimir Malevich. The iconic importance of Victory over the Sun as a theatrical event is universally acknowledged. This volume brings together the first fully annotated translation of the libretto of this ‘anti-opera’ and other important primary source materials, including the score, the set and costume designs and contemporary newspaper reviews. The second part of the volume provides a wide-ranging collection of interpretive essays which explore the artistic, literary and musical dimensions of the staging, its theatrical and historical context, its relationship to Italian Futurism, and its position within the Russian modernist movement. You can read more about the Pushkin House event on 22 November 2012 on the Russian Art and Culture website by following this link http:// www.russianartandculture.com/victory-over-sun-book-launch-pushkin-house/ (will open in a new window). And you can see and hear more in Alexander Kan's report on the BBC Russian site by following this link http://www.bbc.co.uk/russian/multimedia/2012/11/121127_futuristic_dinner.shtml (will open in a new window). In 1913, the year in which the Romanovs celebrated their tercentenary, the premieres of two revolutionary theatrical events brought Russian artists to the forefront of the European avant-garde. With its nonsensical ‘trans-sense’ libretto by Aleksei Kruchenykh and Velimir Khlebnikov, experimental score by Mikhail Matiushin and pioneering abstract sets and costumes by Kazimir Malevich, the Futurist opera Victory over the Sun may be compared in terms of its radical assault on artistic convention to Igor Stravinsky’s ballet The Rite of Spring. This interdisciplinary volume brings together a distinguished team of international scholars to discuss the artistic significance of this epoch-making ‘anti-opera’, which is now recognised as a key event of avant-garde cultural production, and a turning point in stage history. The book offers new insight into the theatre practice and history of Russian Futurist performance, which, to date, has received little attention from theatre scholars despite its influence on the development of European drama in the twentieth century. As well as an annotated translation of the libretto, the book includes reproductions of the score and contemporary newspaper reviews. Illustrated throughout, and with a colour plate section containing twenty-seven colour images of costume designs, posters and other work by the abstract artist Kazimir Malevich.Victory Over the Sun: The World’s First Futurist Opera List of Illustrations Acknowledgements About the Text About the contributors                                                                                                            Introduction – Rosamund Bartlett and Sarah Dadswell                                                          Texts and Scores i.     Biographies of the Librettists, Set Designer and Composer ii.    Annotated translation of the libretto of Victory Over the Sun (translated by Rosamund Bartlett) iii.   Pobeda nad solntsem: facsimile of the original 1913 Russian publication, incorporating some fragments by Matiushin iv.   Maria Ender’s transcription of Matiushin’s original score for Victory Over the Sun v.    Contemporary reviews vi.   ‘About the Opera Victory Over the Sun’, by Aleksei Kruchenykh            Essays The Russian Cubo-Futurist Opera Victory Over the Sun: Aleksei Kruchenykh’s Alogical Creation, Michaela Böhmig Entertainment and Enlightenment in Late Imperial Russian Theatre, Murray Frame   On the Eve: the Russian Stage 1911–1914, Laurence Senelick                                       Victories over the Sun: the Drama of the Russian Futurists, Robert Leach    Darkness and Light: Solar Eclipse as a Cubo-Futurist Metaphor John E. Bowlt         Kazimir Malevich and the Designs for Victory Over the Sun, Christina Lodder     Victory over the Sun – the Music, Catja Gaebel                              “Be a Spectator with a Large Ear”: Victory over the Sun as Public Laboratory Experiment for Mikhail Matiushin's Theories of Colour Vision, Margareta Tillberg Branding the Futurists, Sarah Dadswell The Collision of Italian and Russian Futurism: Marinetti’s Visit to Russia, Aurora Egidio Burnt by the Sun: the Transmutation of Performativity, Theatricality, and Framing in the Late Work of Kazimir Malevich, Anna Wexler-Katsnelson A Modern Victory: Reflections on the 1999 Staging, Julia Hollander, Director and Jeremy Arden, Composer, in conversation with Sarah Dadswell Notes Selected Bibliography Index
Accès libre
Affiche du document Circled With Stone

Circled With Stone

Mark Stoyle

3h32min15

  • Histoire
  • Youscribe plus
283 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h32min.
Winner of the Devon Book of the Year Award 2003, Circled with Stone is the most comprehensive study to date of the fortifications of an early modern English city. The culmination of some twenty years of archaeological and documentary research, it provides a richly detailed portrait of the ancient system of walls, towers and gates which ringed the city of Exeter during the Tudor and early Stuart periods. The book traces the development of the fortifications over time, explores the many purposes which they served, and shows how they were defended against a series of major attacks: most notably during the Prayer Book rebellion of 1549 and the English Civil War. The text is accompanied by a series of extensive transcripts from Exeter's matchless civic archives, including two newly-discovered documents relating to the Prayer Book rebellion. The book includes a wealth of illustrations and brings together, for the very first time, colour reproductions of all the early maps of Exeter, as well as a series of specially commissioned photographs of the city walls today. Designed to be accessible to the general reader, as well as to the specialist, Circled with Stone paints a uniquely vivid picture of the role which urban fortifications played in everyday life in one of early modern England's greatest cities. Richly detailed, fully illustrated and accessible to the general reader as well as of interest to historians and archaeologists.List of Illustrations Preface Acknowledgements Part I: The History of the City Walls Introduction 1. The Nature of the City Defences 2. Purpose and Function 3. Maintainance and Repair 4. The City Defences under the Tudors 5. The City Defences under the Early Stuarts Conclusion Suggested Further Reading Part II: Documents Relating to the City Walls Introduction The Exeter Receivers and their Accounts Editorial Conventions 1. Extracts from the City Receivers' Accounts, 1482-1660 2. Expenses in Repelling Perkin Warbeck, 1497 3. Extracts from the Chamber Act Books, 1511-1545 4. Purchase of Ordnance for the City, 1545 5. Expenses in the 'Commotion', 1549 6. List of the City Ordnance, 1556 7. Instructions for the Defence of the City, 1643 8. List of the City Ordnance, 1643, Annual Expenditure on the City Defences, 1485-1660 Glossary of Terms used in the Documents Abbreviations Notes Indexes Places and Subjects Persons
Accès libre
Affiche du document Film, Cinema, Genre

Film, Cinema, Genre

Steve Neale

3h01min30

  • Photographie
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
242 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h01min.
This book brings together key works by pioneering film studies scholar Steve Neale. From the 1970s to the 2010s Neale’s vital and unparalleled contribution to the subject has shaped many of the critical agendas that helped to confirm film studies’ position as an innovative discipline within the humanities. Although known primarily for his work on genre, Neale has written on a far wider range of topics. In addition to selections from the influential volumes Genre (1980) and Genre and Hollywood (2000), and articles scrutinizing individual genres – the melodrama, the war film, science fiction and film noir –   this Reader provides critical examinations of cinema and technology, art cinema, gender and cinema, stereotypes and representation, cinema history, the film industry, New Hollywood, and film analysis. Many of the articles included are recommended reading for a range of university courses worldwide, making the volume useful to students at undergraduate level and above, researchers, and teachers of film studies, media studies, gender studies and cultural studies. The collection has been selected and edited by Frank Krutnik and Richard Maltby, scholars who have worked closely with Neale and been inspired by his diverse and often provocative critical innovations. Their introduction assesses the significance of Neale’s work, and contextualizes it within the development of UK film studies. DOI: https://doi.org/10.47788/YRCC6901List of Illustrations Acknowledgements Steve Neale and Film Studies: An Introduction Section A: Beginnings 1 The Reappearance of Movie Review in Screen, 16.3 (1975), 112–15 2 Personal Views Review in Screen, 17.3 (1976), 118–22 3 The Invention of Cinema Chapter 3 of Cinema and Technology: Image, Sound, Colour (London: Macmillan, 1985) Section B: Genre(s) 4 Genre Chapter 3 of Genre (London: British Film Institute, 1980) 5 Questions of Genre Screen, 31.1 (1990), 45–66 6 Genre and Hollywood Chapter 7 of Genre and Hollywood (London: Routledge, 2000) 7 Melodrama and Tears Screen, 27.6 (1986), 6–23 8 Aspects of Ideology and Narrative Form in the American War Film Screen, 32.1 (1991), 33–57 Section C: Interventions and Provocations 9 Art Cinema as Institution Screen, 22.1 (1981), 11–40 10 Masculinity as Spectacle: Reflections on Men and Mainstream Cinema Screen, 24.6 (1983), 2–17 11 Melo Talk: On the Meaning and Use of the Term ‘Melodrama’ in the American Trade Press The Velvet Light Trap, 32 (1993), 66–89 12 Hollywood Blockbusters: Historical Dimensions Movie Blockbusters, ed. by Julian Stringer (London: Routledge, 2003), pp. 47–60 Section D: Film Analysis 13 Issues of Difference: Alien and Blade Runner Fantasy and the Cinema, ed. by James Donald (London: British Film Institute, 1989), pp. 213–23 14 Narration, Point of View and Patterns in the Soundtrack of Letter from an Unknown Woman Style and Meaning: Essays in the Detailed Analysis of Film, ed. by John Gibbs and Douglas Pye (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2005), pp. 99–107 15 Gestures, Movements and Actions in Rio Bravo Howard Hawks: New Perspectives, ed. by Ian Brookes (London: Palgrave/British Film Institute, 2016), pp. 110–21 16 The Art of the Palpable: Composition and Staging in the Widescreen Films of Anthony Mann Widescreen Worldwide, ed. by John Belton, Sheldon Hall and Stephen Neale (New Barnet: John Libbey, 2010), pp. 91–106 17 ‘I Can’t Tell Anymore Whether You’re Lying’: Double Indemnity, Human Desire and the Narratology of Femmes Fatales The Femme Fatale: Images, Histories, Contexts, ed. by Helen Hanson and Catherine O’Rawe (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), pp. 187–98 Steve Neale Bibliography Index
Accès libre
Affiche du document Freedom's Pioneer

Freedom's Pioneer

3h25min30

  • Etudes littéraires
  • Youscribe plus
274 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h25min.
John McGrath's plays are compulsory reading and viewing for students of drama, film and television courses in many University and Further Education departments and yet despite recognition of the central importance of McGrath's work, very little has been written about him. This is the first full-length study of his work. This book illuminates the importance of John McGrath's role in the development of theatre, film and television in the last four decades of the twentieth century. Through play and script-writing, through directing, producing and co-ordinating work, and through his critical, political and philosophical reflections, McGrath exerted a powerful influence over developments and innovations in all three art forms. The contributors include film and television directors, actors, designers, writers, university researchers and journalists, many of whom worked with McGrath. Questions of day-to-day working practice are addressed alongside broader political and aesthetic concerns, and the question of McGrath's relationship to and influence on the arts in Scotland receives careful consideration. List of Illustrations Notes on Contributors Acknowledgements Foreword by Richard Eyre Introduction by David Bradby and Susanna Capon Part One: Culture and the Socialist Vision 1. Theatre,Theory and Politics: The Contribution of John McGrath, Maria DiCenzo Part Two: Early Work 2. Get Out and Get On: Events While Guarding the Bofors Gun, Peter Thomson 3. A Life Outside: John McGrath and the Everyman Theatre, Liverpool, Ros Merkin 4. 'Serjeant Musgrave Dances to a Different Tune': John McGrath's Adaptation of John Arden's Serjeant Musgrave's Dance, John Bull 5. Finding the Right Places, Finding the Right Audiences: Topicality and Entertainment in the Work of England, Nadine Holdsworth Part Three: John McGrath and Scotland 6. Border Warranty: John McGrath and Scotland, Randall Stevenson 7. Celtic Centres, the Fringes and John McGrath, Ian Brown 8. Bursting through the hoop and dancing on the edge of the seediness': Five Scottish Playwrights Talk about John McGrath, Ian Brown Part Four: Case Studies 9. The Television Adaptation of The Cheviot, the Stag and the Black, Black Oil, Robin Nelson 10. A Practical Realism: McGrath, Brecht, Lukacs and Blood Red Roses, Stephen Lacey 11. A Good Night In: The Long Roads, Robert Dawson-Scott 12. Three One-Woman Epics: The Political Performer, Olga Taxidou Part Five: Working with John 13. Working with John-Interviews by Susanna Capon: Pamela Howard Bill Paterson Troy Kennedy Martin Jack Gold John Bett Jenny Tiramani Elizabeth MacLennan Works by John McGrath Notes Index
Accès libre
Affiche du document The Censorship of British Drama 1900-1968 Volume 4

The Censorship of British Drama 1900-1968 Volume 4

Steve Nicholson

3h37min30

  • Histoire
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
290 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h37min.
Winner of the Society for Theatre Research Book Prize – 2016 This is the final volume in a new paperback edition of Steve Nicholson’s definitive four-volume survey of British theatre censorship from 1900-1968, based on previously undocumented material, covering the period 1960-1968. This brings to its conclusion the first comprehensive research on the Lord Chamberlain's Correspondence Archives for the 20th century. The 1960s was a significant decade in social and political spheres in Britain, especially in the theatre. As certainties shifted and social divisions widened, a new generation of theatre makers arrived, ready to sweep away yesterday’s conventions and challenge the establishment. Analysis exposes the political and cultural implications of a powerful elite exerting pressure in an attempt to preserve the veneer of a polite, unquestioning society. This new edition includes a contextualising timeline for those readers who are unfamiliar with the period, and a new preface. DOI: https://doi.org/10.47788/TGOJ9339Acknowledgements Timeline: The Political and Cultural Calender Introduction: Galahad and Mordred 1. The Inflamed Appendix (1960-1961) 2. No Laughing Matter (1961-1962) 3. Pleasuring the Lord Chamberlain (1963) 4. Some S. I will not Eat (1964) 5. Blows for Freedom (1965) 6. Going Wild (1965-1966) 7. Getting Tough (1966) 8. An Affront to Constitutional Principles (1967) 9. Let the Sunshine In (1968) 10. Afterwords (1968-1971) Notes Select Bibliography Index
Accès libre
Affiche du document Mermaids

Mermaids

Axel Müller

2h07min30

  • Sciences humaines et sociales
  • Youscribe plus
170 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 2h07min.
Women with fish tails are among the oldest and still most popular of mythological creatures, possessing a powerful allure and compelling ambiguity. They dwell right in the uncanniest valley of the sea: so similar to humans, yet profoundly other. Mermaids: Art, Symbolism and Mythology presents a comprehensive, interdisciplinary and beautifully illustrated study of mermaids and their influence on Western culture. The roots of mermaid mythology and its metamorphosis through the centuries are discussed with examples from visual art, literature, music and architecture—from 600 BCE right up to the present day. Our story starts in Mesopotamia, source of the earliest preserved illustrations of half-human, half-fish creatures. The myths and legends of the Mesopotamians were incorporated and adopted by ancient Greek, Etruscan and Roman cultures. Then, during the early medieval period, ancient mythological creatures such as mermaids were confused, transformed and reinterpreted by Christian tradition to begin a new strand in mermaid lore. Along the way, all manner of stunning—and sometimes bizarre or unsettling—depictions of mermaids emerged. Written in an accessible and entertaining style, this book challenges conventional views of mermaid mythology, discusses mermaids in the light of evolutionary theory and aims to inspire future studies of these most curious of imaginary creatures.Preface Memorial note 1 Introduction: Why mermaids? 2 Mermaids conceived: hybrid goddesses and beasts in antiquity 3 Christian adaptations in the Romanesque to Baroque eras 4 Mermaid passions: obsessive fixation in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century art 5 Mermaids everywhere: postwar commercialization and trivialization 6 Mermaids rationalized: evolutionary theory confronts the fantastic References Acknowledgements Index
Accès libre
Affiche du document Picturegoers

Picturegoers

Luke McKernan

1h38min15

  • Sciences humaines et sociales
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
131 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h38min.
This book is a carefully selected, thematically arranged collection of eyewitness accounts of seeing motion pictures – from the 1890s to the present day, and from countries across the globe. Included here are essays, diaries, memoirs, travel accounts, oral history interviews, poems and extracts from novels. These verbatim accounts – from both professional and amateur writers – have been selected not only for what they tell us about the historical experience of cinema in many countries, but for their literary value. It is evocative testimony that shows how deeply cinema touches emotional needs, and the huge impact that the cinema has had on modern society. One-hundred and fourteen carefully selected excerpts are organized thematically into six evocatively-titled sections: ‘First Encounters’, ‘Audiences’, ‘Places’, ‘Players’, ‘Reality’, and ‘Fears and Desires’. We find a host of everyday voices responding to cinema – Rudolf Rocker, anarchist; Li Hung-fu, Chinese villager; James Malone, wrestler; George Jordan, policeman; ‘Negro male student in High School, age 17’. Amongst these are interspersed the insights of more familiar names – Virginia Woolf, Stefan Zweig, George Orwell, J.M. Coetzee, Arnold Bennett, Elizabeth Bowen, J.B. Priestley, John Osborne, J.G. Ballard, D.H. Lawrence, Roland Barthes and Arnold Schwarzenegger. Twenty-one images complement the text by illustrating different ways in which films have been viewed, from battlefield cinemas to infrared studies of child audiences, from Madagascar to Vietnam, from Cinerama to virtual reality. While most film history studies put films or those who produce them first, Picturegoers puts the voices of the audience first. It analyses and celebrates the audience’s point of view, shaped by time, experience and place, providing a rich, entertaining portrait of a medium that became so transformative precisely because anyone, rich or poor, educated or not, could share in it. Frank Cottrell-Boyce’s piece A Love Letter to Cinema, written for BBC Radio 4's Today programme (May 2021), and broadcast just as cinema emerged from lockdown, provides a fitting coda to the book - affirming the importance of cinema as a collective cultural experience. The book will appeal to scholars interested in the relationship between cinema and society, those engaged in audience studies, and general readers interested in world cinema history.Contents   Acknowledgements List of Illustrations   Introduction First Encounters Anon., ‘Department of Physics’ Anon., ‘Magic Lantern Kinetoscope’ Anon., ‘Sporting Notions’ Maxim Gorky, ‘Last Night I Was in the Kingdom of Shadows’ Jean Renoir, ‘My Life and My Films’ Junichiro Tanizaki, ‘Childhood Years’ Joan Courthope, ‘Diaries of Joan Courthope’ Mozaffar al-Din Shah Qajar, ‘Cinema in Iran’ Edward Wagenknecht, ‘The Movies in the Age of Innocence’ Filson Young, ‘Kinema’ Robert Roberts, ‘The Classic Slum’ Fermin Rocker, ‘The East End Years’ Ingmar Bergman, ‘Magic Lantern’ Leila Berg, ‘Flickerbook’ John Sutherland, ‘Magic Moments’ John Wyver, ‘Live from the Met’   Audiences Andrei Tarkovsky, ‘Sculpting in Time’ Ben Thomas, ‘Ben’s Limehouse’ Dorothy Richardson, ‘The Front Rows’ Taizo Fujimoto, ‘The Nightside of Japan’ Maxwell Bodenheim, ‘East Side Moving Picture Theatre—Sunday’ Claude Roy, ‘Into China’ Min-Ch’ien T.Z. Tyau, ‘London Through Chinese Eyes’ Mary Helen Fee, ‘A Woman’s Impression of the Philippines’ Horace Green, ‘The Log of a Noncombatant’ Graham Greene, ‘The Lawless Roads’ George Jordan, ‘Bioscope & Cinematograph Shows’ Verónica Feliu, ‘Movie-Going as Resistant Community’ Louis Couperus, ‘Il Cinematografo’ Ruth Frances Woodsmall, ‘Moslem Women Enter a New World’ Harold Hobson, ‘Indirect Journey’ C.W. Kimmins, ‘The Cinema’ Alexander L. Pach, ‘With the Silent Workers’ Italo Calvino, ‘A Cinema-Goer’s Autobiography’ John Foster Fraser, ‘Russia of To-day’ Rudolf Rocker, ‘Alexandra Palace Internment Camp in the First World War, 1914–1918’ Richard Wollheim, ‘Germs’ Lauchlan MacLean Watt, ‘The Heart of a Soldier’ Arthur Ruhl, ‘The Other Americans’ Jack Common, ‘Kiddar’s Luck’ Jean-Paul Sartre, ‘Words’ Josef Morrell, ‘Tell Me Grandpa’ Georges Perec, ‘Things’ James Malone, ‘Family Life and Work Experience Before 1918’ Archie Bell, ‘The Spell of China’ Thomas Mann, ‘The Magic Mountain’ Luke McKernan, ‘Going to the Cinema’   Places Khalil Totah, ‘Dynamite in the Middle East’ Edmund Wilson, ‘Red, Black, Blond and Olive’ C.M. Leicester, ‘A Holiday in Burma’ Edwa Moser, ‘The Mexican Touch’ ‘Inbad’, ‘An Island Night’s Entertainment’ Gloria Swanson, ‘Swanson on Swanson’ Laurie Lee, ‘As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning’ Madhur Jaffrey, ‘Climbing the Mango Trees’ Frank Kessler, ‘Astor-Harmonie’ Harry A. Franck, ‘Working North from Patagonia’ Li Hung-fu, ‘Report from a Chinese Village’ Arthur Ransome, ‘The Crisis in Russia’ Miss Johnson, ‘An Evening at the Cinema’ Park Yeon-mi, ‘In Order to Live’ Otto Mänchen-Helfen, ‘Journey to Tuva’ Olga Briceño, ‘Cocks and Bulls in Caracas’ Jacob Tann, ‘Going to Watch a Movie in 3021’   Players James Baldwin, ‘The Devil Finds Work’ C.H. Rolph, ‘London Particulars’ Molly Picon, ‘So Laugh a Little’ Arnold Bennett, ‘Journal 1929’ Lorna Sage, ‘Bad Blood’ Edward W. Said, ‘Out of Place’ Nelson Mandela, ‘Long Walk to Freedom’ J.B. Priestley, ‘Delight’ V.S. Naipaul, ‘The Middle Passage’ John Osborne, ‘A Better Class of Person’ Thomas Burke, ‘Nights in Town’ Anon., ‘Sociology of Film’ Es’kia Mphahlele, ‘Down Second Avenue’ ‘Negro male student in High School. Age 17’, ‘Movies and Conduct’ Paul van Ostaijen, ‘Asta Nielsen’   Reality Stefan Zweig, ‘The World of Yesterday’ Sydney Race, ‘The Journals of Sydney Race’ J.G. Ballard, ‘Miracles of Life’ Véra Tsaritsyn [Lady Colin Campbell], ‘Modern Gladiators’ Henry Newbolt, ‘The War Films’ Virginia Woolf, ‘The Cinema’ Tony Harrison, ‘Flicks and This Fleeting Life’ Ray Lankester, ‘Diversions of a Naturalist’ Gilbert Frankau, ‘Gilbert Frankau’s Self Portrait’ George Orwell, ‘Diaries’ Arnold Schwarzenegger, ‘Total Recall’ Paramahansa Yogananda, ‘Autobiography of a Yogi’ Mihail Sebastian, ‘Journal 1935–1944’ Anon., ‘Newsreels’ Joseph Roth, ‘Twenty Minutes from Before the War’ Taran N. Khan, ‘Shadow City’   Fears and Desires Franz Kafka, ‘The Diaries of Franz Kafka’ Peter O’Toole, ‘Loitering with Intent’ Vernon Scannell, ‘Autobiographical Note’ Mrs K.J. Bills, ‘Facts about Birth of a Nation Play at the Colonial’ Elizabeth Bowen, ‘Why I Go to the Cinema’ J.M. Coetzee, ‘Boyhood’ Negley Farson, ‘The Way of a Transgressor’ D.H. Lawrence, ‘Mornings in Mexico’ Rrekgetsi Chimeloane, ‘Whose Laetie Are You?’ Canon H.D. Rawnsley, ‘The Child and the Cinematograph Show’ ‘Shorthand typist secretary, 21, female’, ‘British Cinemas and their Audiences’ John Baxter, ‘A Pound of Paper’ Paul Rose, ‘My Memories of Star Wars Are Only True from a Certain Point of View’ Mary J. Breen, ‘The Legion of Decency’ ‘College girl of nineteen’, ‘Movies and Conduct’ Robert Ferguson, ‘Scandinavians’ Philip Norman, ‘Babycham Night’ Roland Barthes, ‘Leaving the Movie Theater’   Coda Frank Cottrell-Boyce, ‘A Love Letter to Cinema’   Bibliography Index
Accès libre
Affiche du document John Betjeman and Cornwall

John Betjeman and Cornwall

Philip Payton

3h30min45

  • Etudes littéraires
  • Youscribe plus
281 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h31min.
“I was one of the 8,000-strong ‘Betjemaniacs’ gathered at Carruan farm in Cornwall in August 2006 to celebrate the hundredth birthday of Sir John Betjeman, the late Poet Laureate. Situated high above Polzeath, with tremendous views out to the azure Atlantic and the great headland of Pentire, Carruan was, with its exhilarating sense of space, an inspirational choice for this great event. I stood in the pasty-queue with the Archbishop of Canterbury, watched the poetic performance of Bert Biscoe, and browsed among the bookstalls in the hope of finding second-hand copies of rare Betjeman books to add to my collection. Here was that Patrick Taylor-Martin volume that had eluded me for years, and Betjeman’s Britain – compiled by Candida Lycett Green, Betjeman’s daughter – together with more recent editions of old favourites.”          Philip Payton, in the preface to John Betjeman and Cornwall Quintessentially English, Betjeman was an 'outsider' in England - and doubly so in Cornwall where, as he was the first to admit, he was a ‘foreigner’. And yet, as this book describes, Betjeman also strove to acquire a veneer of ‘Cornishness', cultivating an alternative Celtic identity, and finding inspiration in Cornwall's Anglo-Catholic tradition. He was also active in Cornish affairs, insisting that Cornwall was not part of England, and championing Cornish environmental concerns that anticipated today's focus on sustainability. The new research in this book includes a wealth of previously ignored source material, forming a lively new account of Betjeman's life and work and his defining relationship with Cornwall. This book is likely to be controversial and to provoke debate. List of Illustrations Preface Preamble: 'The Sky Widens to a Sense of Cornwall' 1.  'That Bold Coast-line Where he was Not Born': John Betjeman as 'foreigner' 2.  'Into Betjemanland': Imagining North Cornwall 3.  'The Oldest Part of Cornwall': Hawker, Baring-Gould and 'Betjeman Country' 4.  'Caverns of Light revealed the Holy Grail': Betjeman and The Secret Glory 5.  'A Longing for Ireland': Sean O'Betjeman and the 'Anglo-Celtic Muse' 6.  'I'm Free! I'm Free!': Cornwall as Liberation 7.  'Jan Trebetjeman, The Cornish Clot': John Betjeman Goes Native Epilogue: 'When People talk to me about "The British"...I Give Up' Notes Further Reading Index
Accès libre
Affiche du document Madness and Literature

Madness and Literature

2h16min30

  • Medecine
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
182 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 2h16min.
Mental illness has been a favourite topic for authors throughout the history of literature, while psychologists and psychiatrists such as Sigmund Freud and Karl Jaspers have in turn been interested in and influenced by literature. Pioneers within philosophy, psychiatry and literature share the endeavour to explore and explain the human mind and behaviour, including what a society deems as being outside perceived normality. Using a theoretical approach that is eclectic and transdisciplinary, this volume engages with literature’s multifarious ways of probing minds and bodies in a state of mental ill health. The cases and the theory are in dialogue with a clinical approach, addressing issues and diagnoses such as trauma, psychosis, bipolar disorder, eating disorders, self-harm, hoarding disorder, PTSD and Digital Sexual Assault. The chapters in Part I address literary representations of madness with a historical awareness, outlining the socio-political potentials of madness literature. Part II investigates how representations of mental illness in literature can offer unique insights into the subjective experience of alternative states of mind. Part III reflects on how literary cases can be applied to help inform mental health education, how they can be used therapeutically and how they are giving credence to new diagnoses. Throughout the book, the contributors consider how the language and discourses of literature—both stylistically and theoretically—can teach us something new about what it means to be mentally unwell.Introduction: Madness and Literature and the Health Humanities Lasse Raaby Gammelgaard DOI: 10.47788/AFZH5419 Part I: Literary History and Socio-Political Perspectives 1. Layla and Majnun in Historical and Contemporary Conceptions of Madness in Islamic Psychology Alan Weber DOI: 10.47788/RRMJ3362 2. The Anti-Psychiatry Ethos in Samuel Beckett’s Murphy Shoshana Benjamin DOI: 10.47788/YEGJ4716 3. Apartheid’s Garden: Dismantling Madness in J.M. Coetzee’s Life & Times of Michael K Sebastian C. Galbo DOI: 10.47788/TJNQ3925 4. Sniffs and Dribblers: Poppy Shakespeare and the Identities of Madness Clare Allan DOI: 10.47788/SEHO5518 Part II: Literary Theory and Experiencing Mental Illness 5. Reading Shattering Minds and Extended Selves in Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway Anna Ovaska DOI: 10.47788/KVCT9727 6. Spill the Words: Speechlessness and Creativity in the Writing of Janet Frame Mary Elene Wood DOI: 10.47788/ZEIP9285 7. Pronominal Shifts and the Confusion of Self with Not-Self Alice Hervé DOI: 10.47788/KQGN8180 8. Rethinking Clinical and Critical Perspectives on Psychosis in Kathy Acker’s Writing Charley Baker DOI: 10.47788/KIQF3977 9. Countering the DSM in Poetry about Bipolar Disorder Lasse Raaby Gammelgaard DOI: 10.47788/GRFK1241 10. Seeing Feeling: Dissociation and Post-Traumatic Memory in the Graphic Novel Perfect Hair Penni Russon DOI: 10.47788/WKFD8677 Part III: Literary Instrumentality and Clinical Psychopathology 11. Writing Therapy, Writing Data: Therapeutic Writing as a Methodological and Ethical Approach in Researching Digital Sexual Assault Signe Uldbjerg DOI: 10.47788/SWBN2997 12. A Question of Context: Sites for Cultural Negotiation in Narratives of Manic Depression Megan Milota DOI: 10.47788/LTVE5090 13. Conscripting Dante: History, Anachronism, and the Uses of Literary Precedents in the ‘New’ Diagnosis of Hoarding Disorder David Orr DOI: 10.47788/QYGF1330 14. Opening Up the Discourse of Male Eating Disorders: Personal Experience in German and English Narratives Heike Bartel DOI: 10.47788/FCMM5517 Afterword Lasse Raaby Gammelgaard DOI: 10.47788/IXUD7033 Notes Index
Accès libre
Affiche du document British Cinema and Middlebrow Culture in the Interwar Years

British Cinema and Middlebrow Culture in the Interwar Years

Lawrence Napper

3h10min30

  • Histoire
  • Youscribe plus
254 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h10min.
British Cinema and Middlebrow Culture in the Interwar Years offers an understanding of British Cinema between 1928 and 1939 through an analysis of the relationship between the British film industry and other ‘culture industries’ such as the radio, music recording, publishing and early television. This relationship has been seen as a weakness of the British film-making tradition, but Lawrence Napper stages a re-appraisal of that tradition, arguing that it is part of a specific strategy of differentiation from Hollywood cinema, designed to appeal to the ‘middlebrow’ aesthetic of the most rapidly expanding audience of the period—the lower middle class. Lawrence Napper argues that the ‘middlebrow’ reputation for aesthetic conservatism masks an audience and popular culture marked by dynamism. ‘Middlebrow’ texts addressed a British audience on the move, physically (into the new suburbs), socially (as upwardly mobile consumers), economically (employed in new and developing industries, and involved in new modes of living), and culturally (embracing new forms of mass cultural consumption, such as the cinema, the wireless and the best-selling novel). The ability of these audiences to adapt cultures of the past to the media of modern life (through stage or screen adaptations) ensured their negative reputation amongst Modernist commentators and intellectual elites. List of Illustrations Preface and Acknowledgements Introduction: The 'Middlebrow' Concept of the National: Music Hath Charms 1935 1. A Law for British Film: The Cinematography Films Act 1927 2. British Cinema, The Publishing Industry and the Mass Market: The Constant Nymph 1924-1928 3. The 'Middlebrow' Debate and Film: The Good Companions 1929-1933 4. New and Old Cultures: The Lambeth Walk 1937-1939 Conclusion: The Viability of National Cinema Notes Bibliography Index  
Accès libre
Affiche du document Alternative Film Culture in Interwar Britain

Alternative Film Culture in Interwar Britain

Jamie Sexton

3h03min00

  • Sciences humaines et sociales
  • Youscribe plus
244 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h03min.
In the first book-length study to concentrate specifically on Britain, Jamie Sexton examines the rise of avant-garde and experimental film-making between the wars. The book provides a detailed view of how modernist and anti-mainstream currents emerged in the film industry in Britain. Alternative Film Culture in Inter-War Britain is the first book-length study of a number of currents which opposed mainstream filmmaking and which championed film as an intellectual, modern art. It traces the growth of new approaches to film through exhibition and writing on cinema, and looks at how this cultural formation shaped certain areas of filmmaking. As such, it takes an interdisciplinary approach in which a study of independent filmmaking in this era is firmly placed within a cultural context, linking the ways in which films were presented, received and produced.This is the first in-depth look at 'alternative film culture' in Britain between the wars will excite many in the film, and film studies, worlds. It combines the history with analysis of the films themselves, and of their reception. It looks at the operations of a key contemporary institution, the original Film Society. Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction: From Avant-Garde Film to Alternative Film Culture Chapter 1. The Network of Alternative Film Culture Chapter 2. Deconstruction, Burlesque and Parody Chapter 3. Drifters and the Emergence of an Alternative British Cinema Chapter 4. Alternative Film Culture in the Shadow of Sound Chapter 5. Montage, Machinery and Sound Chapter 6. Mechanization and Abstraction Chapter 7. Borderline: Subjectivity and Experimentation Conclusion Bibliography
Accès libre
Affiche du document Theatres of the Troubles

Theatres of the Troubles

Bill McDonnell

3h25min30

  • Histoire
  • Youscribe plus
274 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h25min.
The first book to document grass roots popular theatres which developed from within the working class Republican and Loyalist communities of Belfast and Derry during the latest phase of the four hundred year conflict between Ireland and Britain. Theatres of the Troubles explores the history of one of the most important periods of political theatre activity in post-war Europe. This significant study seeks to convey how the moment to moment unfolding of the conflict determined organisation, ‘texts’, performance contexts and reception, and how the theatres operated within Republican and Loyalist communities. All chapters draw upon previously unpublished primary sources, including texts, interviews and letters, shared workshops and witnessed performance. In examining not only how these theatres related to each other, but also their relationship to European traditions of radical theatre and to the liberation models which were developing in neo- and post-colonial contexts in the South, Theatres of the Troubles represents a key addition to our understanding of the critical relationship between historical conditions and the development of radical theatre forms. Acknowledgements Chronology of Key Events Glossary of Terms 1. Introduction 2. The Historical Context 3. 'Gentle Fury': Father Des and the People's Theatre 4. 'At the Heart of the Struggle': the plays of Belfast Community Theatre 5. 'From Pedagogy of the Oppressed to Theatre of the Oppressed': the H Block Theatres 6. Derry Frontline: a template for liberation 7. Staging the Peace (1) Dubbeljoint at Amharclann na Carraige 8. Staging the Peace (2) the plays of Laurence McKeown and Brian Campbell 9. 'Not a Profession but a Movement': politics, theatre and Republicanism 10. 'Only Catholics Combine': Loyalism and theatre 11. Last Words Bibliography
Accès libre
Affiche du document The Appreciation of Film

The Appreciation of Film

Richard Lowell MacDonald

1h59min15

  • Médias
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
159 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h59min.
This book offers the first full account of the film society movement in Britain and its contribution to post-World War Two film culture. It brings to life a lost history of alternative film exhibition and challenges the general assumption that the study of film began with university courses on ‘Film Studies’. Showing how film societies operated and the lasting impression they made on film culture, The Appreciation of Film details the history of film education in Britain.  The book illuminates the changing relationship between volunteer-run societies and professionalised agencies promoting film art such as festivals, specialist commercial distributors and public bodies such as the British Film Institute. Drawing on original archival research and oral history interviews the book acknowledges the vigour and dedication of volunteer film society activists and presents contemporary readers with a record of their achievement. Written in an accessible style, this is a study of 16mm projectors, associational life and the making of film culture in Britain. It reclaims the marginalised civic cinephilia of volunteer film society activists whilst providing an alternative narrative of the emergence of film study in Britain.         List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction 1 Enthusiasm and Civic Duty: The Emergence of the Film Society Movement 2 The Postwar Transformation of the Film Society Movement 3 Popularising Film Appreciation: Roger Manvell’s Film 4 The British Film Institute, the Film Archive and Film Society Programming 5 Making the World Our Home: Affirmative Internationalism and Film Societies 6 Film Society Criticism, Middlebrow Taste and New Cinemas 7 Film Societies, Universities and the Emergence of Film Studies Conclusion: What Was Film Appreciation? Notes Bibliography Index    
Accès libre
Affiche du document Les Mains Jointes Et Autres Poèmes (1905-1923)

Les Mains Jointes Et Autres Poèmes (1905-1923)

François Mauriac

1h49min30

  • Poésie
  • Youscribe plus
146 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h49min.
Les Mains jointes (1909) was the collection of poetry that launched the long career of Nobel Prize-winning author François Mauriac (1885-1970). This critical edition provides the first ever overview of the volume’s complex textual history (spanning four decades). Drawing on Mauriac’s unpublished cahiers de jeunesse, Paul Cooke challenges the author’s claim that the majority of the poems in the collection were written while he was still at school. A selection of additional poems published between 1905 and 1923 (some of which have remained hidden for nearly a century) allows the reader to situate Les Mains jointes in relation to Mauriac’s wider verse output. In his Introduction, Cooke both explores the genesis and history of Les Mains jointes and offers some analysis of Mauriac’s style as a poet. Sigles et abreviations, vii; Introduction, ix; Remerciements, xxix; LES MAINS JOINTES; I L'ECOLIER; L'Ecolier, 5; L'Ame ancienne, 6; Ami d'enfance, 7; Grandes vacances, 8; Vacances de Paques, 11; II L'ETUDIANT; Depart, 15; [L'Etudiant] I, 15; [L'Etudiant] II, 16; [L'Etudiant] III, 16; [L'Etudiant] IV, 17; Evocation, 17; III L'AMI; [L'Ami] I, 21; [L'Ami] II, 21; A un apotre, 22; Le Vaincu, 23; Souvenir, 24; Le Desert, 25; Trahison, 26; Veillees, 27; Chanson, 28; Contrition, 29; Le Dernier Soir, 29. IV UNE RETRAITE; Une retraite, 33; I: Les Livres, 33; II: La Messe, 34; III: L'Examen particulier, 34; Le Sens de la vie, 36; Les Sables, 37; Le Desastre, 38; La Pecheresse, 39; Faiblesse, 40; L'Immuable, 40; L'Inconnu, 41; L'Illusion, 42; La Peine, 43; A la memoire de R. L., 43; AUTRES POEMES (1905-1923); [Confidences], 47; Intellectuels, 50; L'Abandon, 51; La Maddalena de G. Bellini, 52; Nocturne, 53; Elegie, 54; Les Morts du printemps, 58; Poemes [1921]; [I], 63; [II], 64; [III], 64; [IV], 65; Cybele possedee, 66; Fils du ciel, 67; Ganymede, 68; Delectation, 68; DOSSIER; Notes et variantes, 73; Bibliographie, 110.
Accès libre

...

x Cacher la playlist

Commandes > x
     

Aucune piste en cours de lecture

 

 

--|--
--|--
Activer/Désactiver le son