• Kapcsolat

  • Hírlevél

  • Rólunk

  • Szállítási lehetőségek

  • Prospero könyvpiaci podcast

  • Hírek

  • "All Sturm and no Drang" by Hulle, Dirk Van; Nixon, Mark;

    Beckett and Romanticism. Beckett at Reading 2006

    Sorozatcím: Samuel Beckett Today / Aujourd'hui; 18;

      • 8% KEDVEZMÉNY?

      • A kedvezmény csak az 'Értesítés a kedvenc témákról' hírlevelünk címzettjeinek rendeléseire érvényes.
      • Kiadói listaár EUR 124.00
      • Az ár azért becsült, mert a rendelés pillanatában nem lehet pontosan tudni, hogy a beérkezéskor milyen lesz a forint árfolyama az adott termék eredeti devizájához képest. Ha a forint romlana, kissé többet, ha javulna, kissé kevesebbet kell majd fizetnie.

        51 429 Ft (48 980 Ft + 5% áfa)
      • Kedvezmény(ek) 8% (cc. 4 114 Ft off)
      • Kedvezményes ár 47 315 Ft (45 062 Ft + 5% áfa)

    51 429 Ft

    Beszerezhetőség

    Bizonytalan a beszerezhetőség. Érdemes még egyszer keresni szerzővel és címmel. Ha nem talál másik, kapható kiadást, forduljon ügyfélszolgálatunkhoz!

    Why don't you give exact delivery time?

    A beszerzés időigényét az eddigi tapasztalatokra alapozva adjuk meg. Azért becsült, mert a terméket külföldről hozzuk be, így a kiadó kiszolgálásának pillanatnyi gyorsaságától is függ. A megadottnál gyorsabb és lassabb szállítás is elképzelhető, de mindent megteszünk, hogy Ön a lehető leghamarabb jusson hozzá a termékhez.

    A termék adatai:

    • Kiadó BRILL
    • Megjelenés dátuma 2007. január 1.

    • ISBN 9789042023017
    • Kötéstípus Keménykötés
    • Terjedelem428 oldal
    • Méret 230x155 mm
    • Súly 862 g
    • Nyelv angol
    • Illusztrációk This new issue of Samuel Beckett Today / Aujourd?hui contains three sections: Beckett and Romanticism, the conference proceedings of Beckett at Reading 2006, and finally a collection of miscellaneous essays.
      In the past few decades there have be
    • 0

    Kategóriák

    Rövid leírás:

    This new issue of Samuel Beckett Today / Aujourd?hui contains three sections: Beckett and Romanticism, the conference proceedings of Beckett at Reading 2006, and finally a collection of miscellaneous essays. In the past few decades there have been scattered efforts to address the topic of Beckett and Romanticism, but it remains difficult to fathom his ambiguous and somewhat paradoxical attitude toward this period in literature, music and art history. Although far from being a comprehensive examination, the dossier on ?Beckett and Romanticism? represents the first sustained attempt to give an impetus to the study of this complex theme. Presented here are contributions on Beckett?s attitudes toward Romantic aesthetics in general, including notions such as the sublime, irony, failure, ruins, fragments, fancy, imagination, epitaphs, translation, unreachable horizons, the infinite, the infinitesimal and the unfinished, but also on Beckett?s reading about the Romantic period, his affinity with specific Romantic artists and their influence on works such as Murphy, the trilogy, Krapp?s Last Tape and All Strange Away. The second part of the current issue presents a selection of papers given at the Beckett at Reading 2006 conference in Reading, organised by the Beckett International Foundation to honour the writer?s centenary. Reflecting the importance of the Beckett Foundation?s Archive to scholars, many of these essays present new empirical research in the field of manuscript studies. Further areas of research are illuminated by other contributions which, together with the essays contained in the ?Free Space? section, show the importance and benefits of scholarly dialogue and cross-fertilization between different approaches in current Beckett Studies.

    Több

    Hosszú leírás:

    This new issue of Samuel Beckett Today / Aujourd?hui contains three sections: Beckett and Romanticism, the conference proceedings of Beckett at Reading 2006, and finally a collection of miscellaneous essays. In the past few decades there have been scattered efforts to address the topic of Beckett and Romanticism, but it remains difficult to fathom his ambiguous and somewhat paradoxical attitude toward this period in literature, music and art history. Although far from being a comprehensive examination, the dossier on ?Beckett and Romanticism? represents the first sustained attempt to give an impetus to the study of this complex theme. Presented here are contributions on Beckett?s attitudes toward Romantic aesthetics in general, including notions such as the sublime, irony, failure, ruins, fragments, fancy, imagination, epitaphs, translation, unreachable horizons, the infinite, the infinitesimal and the unfinished, but also on Beckett?s reading about the Romantic period, his affinity with specific Romantic artists and their influence on works such as Murphy, the trilogy, Krapp?s Last Tape and All Strange Away. The second part of the current issue presents a selection of papers given at the Beckett at Reading 2006 conference in Reading, organised by the Beckett International Foundation to honour the writer?s centenary. Reflecting the importance of the Beckett Foundation?s Archive to scholars, many of these essays present new empirical research in the field of manuscript studies. Further areas of research are illuminated by other contributions which, together with the essays contained in the ?Free Space? section, show the importance and benefits of scholarly dialogue and cross-fertilization between different approaches in current Beckett Studies.

    Több

    Tartalomjegyzék:

    Introduction
    Beckett and Romanticism
    Dirk Van HULLE: ?Accursed Creator?: Beckett, Romanticism and ?the Modern Prometheus?
    Paul LAWLEY: Failure and Tradition: Coleridge / Beckett
    Elizabeth BARRY: The Long View: Beckett, Johnson, Wordsworth and the Language of Epitaphs
    Mark NIXON: Beckett and Romanticism in the 1930s
    Chris ACKERLEY: Samuel Beckett and Anthropomorphic Insolence
    Franz Michael MAIER: Two Versions of Nacht und Träume: What Franz Schubert Tells Us about a Favourite Song of Beckett
    John BOLIN: The ?irrational heart?: Romantic Disillusionment in Murphy and The Sorrows of Young Werther
    Andrew EASTHAM: Beckett?s Sublime Ironies: The Trilogy, Krapp?s Last Tape, and the Remainders of Romanticism
    Michael Angelo RODRIGUEZ: Romantic Agony: Fancy and Imagination in Samuel Beckett?s All Strange Away
    Beckett at Reading 2006
    María José CARRERA: ?En un lugar della mancha?: Samuel Beckett?s Reading of Don Quijote in the Whoroscope Notebook
    Friedhelm RATHJEN: Neitherways: Long Ways in Beckett?s Shorts
    John PILLING: From an Abandoned Work: ?all the variants of the one?
    Anthony CORDINGLEY: Beckett and ?l?ordre naturel?: The Universal Grammar of Comment c'est/How It Is
    Marion FRIES
    -DIECKMANN: Beckett and the German Language: Text and Image
    Rónán MCDONALD: ?What a male!?: Triangularity, Desire and Precedence in ?Before Play? and Play
    Sean LAWLOR: ?Alba? and ?Dortmunder?: Signposting Paradise and the Balls
    -aching World
    David A. HATCH: Samuel Beckett?s ?Che Sciagura? and the Subversion of Irish Moral Convention
    Paul STEWART: A Rump Sexuality: The Recurrence of Defecating Horses in Beckett?s Oeuvre
    Gregory BYALA: Murphy, Order, Chaos
    Maximilian de GAYNESFORD: Knowing How To Go On Ending
    Karine GERMONI: The Theatre of Le Dépeupleur
    Dirk Van HULLE / Mark NIXON: ?Holo and unholo?: The Beckett Digital Manuscript Project
    Free Space
    Jackie BLACKMAN: Beckett Judaizing Beckett: ?a Jew from Greenland? in Paris
    Russell SMITH: ?The acute and increasing anxiety of the relation itself?: Beckett, the Author
    -Function, and the Ethics of Enunciation
    Thomas J. COUSINEAU: Demented vs. Creative Emulation in Murphy
    Sjef HOUPPERMANS: Falling Down and Standing Up and Falling Down Again?
    Carla TABAN: Molloy: de ?jeux de mots? aux modalités po(?)étiques de configuration textuelle
    Guillaume GESVRET: Posture de la pri?re, écriture de la précarité (Mal vu mal dit, Cap au pire et ... que nuages...)
    Anne COUSSEAU: Rencontre de Charles Juliet avec Samuel Beckett: ?Cette parole nue qui vient de la souffrance?
    Notes on Contributors

    Több