IVOR ARMSTRONG RICHARDS
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00309--GEORG (GYÖRGY) LUKÁCS and his writings
GEORG LUKÁCS
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1.Phenomenology
2.Discours, figure
3.Dérive à partir de Marx et Freud
4.Des dispositifs pulsionnels
5.Libidinal Economy
6.Instructions païennes
7.Duchamp’s TRANS/formers
8.The Postmodern Condition
9.The Differend: Phrases in Dispute
10.The Assassination of Experience by Painting
11.Peregrinations: Law, Form, Event.
12.Heidegger and ‘the jews’
13.The Inhuman: Reflections on Time
14.The Postmodern Explained: Correspondence
15.The Confessions of Augustine
16.Postmodern Fables
17.Political Writings
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00308--JACQUES-MARIE EMILE LACAN and his works
JACQUES-MARIE EMILE LACAN
1.Ecrits I & II
2.Television: A Challenge to the Psychoanalytic Establishment
3.‘The Mirror Stage as Formative of the Function of the I as Revealed in Psychoanalytic Experience’
4.‘La famille’
5.De la psychose paranoïaque dans ses rapports avec la personnalité
6,Écrits: A Selection
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00307--JULIA KRISTEVA and her works
JULIA KRISTEVA
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1.Séméiotiké: Recherches pour une sémanalyse
2.Le Texte du roman: Approche sémiologique d’une structure discursive transformationelle
3.About Chinese Women
4.Revolution in Poetic Language
5.Desire in Language: A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art
6.Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection
7.Tales of Love
8.In the Beginning was Love: Psychoanalysis and Faith
9.Black Sun: Depression and Melancholy
10.Strangers to Ourselves
11.The Samurai
12.Les Nouvelles maladies de l’âme
13.Proust and the Sense of Time
14.Hannah Arendt
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00306--FREDRIC R. JAMESON and his works
FREDRIC R. JAMESON
00305--ROMAN OSIPOVISCH JAKOBSON and his works
ROMAN JAKOBSON
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1.Selected Writings (seven volumes)
2.The Framework of Language
3.Verbal Art, Verbal Sign, Verbal Time
4.Language in Literature
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00304--WOLFGANG ISER and his works
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1.Die Weltanschauung Henry Fieldings
2.Walter Pater: The Aesthetic Moment
3.‘Indeterminacy and the Reader’s Response in Prose Fiction’
4.The Implied Reader: Patterns of Communication in Prose Fiction from Bunyan to Beckett
5.The Act of Reading: A Theory of Aesthetic Response
6.Laurence Sterne: Tristram Shandy
7.Staging Politics: The Lasting Impact of Shakespeare’s Historical Plays
8.Prospecting: From Reader Response to Literary Anthropology
9.The Fictive and the Imaginary: Charting Literary Anthropology
10.The Range of Interpretation
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00303--LUCE IRIGARAY and her works
00302--LINDA HUTCHEON and her works
LINDA HUTCHEON
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1.Narcissistic
Narrative: The Metafictional Paradox
2.Formalism and the Freudian Aesthetic: The Example of Charles Mauron
3.A Theory of Parody: The Teachings of Twentieth-Century Art Forms
4.A Poetics of Postmodernism: History, Theory, Fiction
5.The Canadian Postmodern: A Study of Contemporary English-Canadian Fiction
6.Leonard Cohen and his Writing
7.The Politics of Postmodernism
8.Other Solitudes: Canadian Multicultural Fictions
9.Splitting Images: Contemporary Canadian Ironies
10.Double-Talking: Essays on Verbal and Visual Ironies in Contemporary Canadian
Art and Literature
11.A Postmodern Reader 12.Irony’s Edge: The Theory and Politics of Irony |
00301--STEPHEN GREENBLATT and his works
STEPHEN GREENBLATT
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1.Three Modern Satirists: Waugh, Orwell, and Huxley 2.Sir Walter Ralegh: The Renaissance Man and his Roles 3.Renaissance Self-Fashioning: From More to Shakespeare 4.The Forms of Power and the Power of Forms in the Renaissance 5.Shakespearean Negotiations: The Circulation of Social Energy in Renaissance England 6.Learning to Curse: Essays in Early Modern Culture 7.Marvelous Possessions: The Wonder of the New World 8.Racial Memory and the Performance of Culture 9.Practicing New Historicism 10.Hamlet in Purgatory 11.Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare 12.The Greenblatt Reader |
00300--SANDRA MORTOLA GILBERT AND SUSAN DAVID GUBAR , and their works
SANDRA MORTOLA GILBERT AND SUSAN DAVID GUBAR
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1.The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century
Literary Imagination
2.Shakespeare’s Sisters: Feminist Essays on Women Poets
3.The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women
4. No Man’s Land: The Place of the Woman Writer in the Twentieth Century, Volume
1, The War of the Words
5.No Man’s Land: The Place of the Woman Writer in the Twentieth Century, Volume
2, Sexchanges
6. No Man’s Land: The Place of the Woman Writer in the Twentieth Century, Volume
3, Letters from the Front |
00299--GÉRARD GENETTE and his works
GÉRARD GENETTE
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1.Figures I
2. Figures II
3.Figures III
4.Mimologics
5.The Architext: An Introduction
6.Narrative Discourse
7.Figures of Literary Discourse
8.Palimpsests: Literature in the Second Degree
9. Narrative Discourse Revisited
10. Paratexts: Thresholds of Interpretation
11.Fiction & Diction
12.The Work of Art: Immanence and Transcendence
13.The Aesthetic Relation
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00298--HANS-GEORG GADAMER (1900–2003) and his works
HANS-GEORG GADAMER (1900–2003)
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1.Truth and Method
2.Hegel’s Dialectic: Five 3.Hermeneutical Studies 4.Hegel’s Dialectic: Five 5.Hermeneutical Studies 6.Dialogue and Dialectic: Eight Hermeneutical Studies on Plato 7.Heidegger Memorial Lectures 8.Philosophical Apprenticeships, Studies in Contemporary German Social Thought 9.The Idea of the Good in Platonic-Aristotelian Philosophy 10.The Relevance of the Beautiful and Other Essays (with Robert Bernasconi, 1986). |
00297--NORTHROP FRYE (1912–1991) and his works
NORTHROP FRYE (1912–1991)
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00296--SIGMUND FREUD (1856–1939) and his works
SIGMUND FREUD (1856–1939)
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1.Studies on Hysteria (1895).
2.The Interpretation of Dreams (1900). 3.The Psychopathology of Everyday Life (1901). 4.Jokes and their Relation to the Unconscious (1905). 5.Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality (1905). 6.Leonardo Da Vinci and a Memory of his 7.Childhood (1910). 8.Totem and Taboo (1913). 9.‘The Moses of Michelangelo’ (1914). 10.‘Thoughts for the Times on War and Death’ (1915). 11.Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego (1921). 12.The Future of an Illusion (1927). 13.Civilization and Its Discontents (1930). 14.Moses and Monotheism: Three Essays (1939). |
00295--(PAUL-)MICHEL FOUCAULT and his works
(PAUL-)MICHEL FOUCAULT
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1.Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason
2.The Archaeology of Knowledge and The Discourse on Language
3. The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences
4. Language, Counter-Memory, Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews by Michel
Foucault
5. Discipline & Punish: The Birth of the Prison
6. ‘My Body, This Paper, This Fire’
7. The Birth of the Clinic
8. The History of Sexuality: Volume 1, An Introduction
9. The Use of Pleasure: Volume 2, The History of Sexuality
10. The Care of the Self: Volume 3, The History of Sexuality
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00294--STANLEY EUGENE FISH and his works
STANLEY EUGENE FISH
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1. John Skelton’s Poetry
2. Surprised by Sin: The Reader in Paradise Lost
3. Self-Consuming Artifacts: The Experience of Seventeenth-Century Literature
4. Is There a Text in this Class? The Authority of Interpretive Communities
5. Doing What Comes Naturally: Change, Rhetoric, and the Practice of Theory in
Literary and Legal Studies
6. There’s No Such Thing as Free Speech, and It’s a Good Thing, Too
7. Professional Correctness: Literary Studies and Political Change
8. The Stanley Fish Reader
9. The Trouble with Principle
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00293--FRANTZ OMAR FANON and his works
FRANTZ OMAR FANON
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1.Black Skin, White Masks
2.Studies in a Dying Colonialism
3.The Wretched of the Earth
4.Towards the African Revolution
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00292--WILLIAM EMPSON (1906–1984) and his works
WILLIAM EMPSON (1906–1984)
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1.Seven Types of Ambiguity
2.Poems
3.Some Versions of Pastoral
4.The Gathering Storm
5.Collected Poems of William Empson
6.The Structure of Complex Words
7.Milton’s God
8.Using Biography
9.Essays on William Shakespeare
10.Argufying: Essays on Literature and Culture
11.Essays on Renaissance Literature
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00291--EYE AND EYE
EYE AND EYE
One day my eyes quarreled with each other
One to see a flower with bees around it
Other to focus a woman lay dead in the street
The quarrel went for hours to the day end
The woman by then buried and flower faded
Again they quarreled on the other day
To see rising sun and setting moon
Time grew, spread moments made it noon
The moon unseen, the sun unbearable
Eyes were anguished I gave them rest
While dying I kept them open to the world
But someone gently closed my eyelids
00290--O, HIDE NOT
O, HIDE NOT
O, hide not, hide not,
I know your presence.
I see your smile,
Though tears are filled.
Your steps true melodies,
My ears heard them alone.
Glances you cast in breeze,
Felt in my heart for ages.
Come out in this moonlight,
Or wait me in your grave.
Death won't dare to hold me back,
For he is familiar with love.
00289--LIES
LIES
They said it was
an accident.
A wall of crowed
Hid that scene.
But their words
could draw the
tragedy.
One said it was a
fifty year old woman.
I was shocked
for my mother would meet me
on that day.
I sat on the road
eyes filled.
Somebody turned and said:
“how dare they to
mislead others? It is
actually a man.”
Did father accompany her?
I trembled asking that myself.
How could I believe
this stranger?
He was far from the
spot of accident.
After minutes
the crowed thinned.
I got up, knees shivering.
Then there was
a path leading to
the spot of tragedy.
I moved forward.
And there...
There I could see
a picture;
Tragic but not personal.
It was a stray dog
crossing the road
and his line of life.
00288--THE MUSIC NIGHT
THE MUSIC NIGHT
Rain rhymed classic notes
Dancing fireflies under trees
Slowly rising fell-down stars
Are those hundred little lights
Sang by someone lovely song
Just as river gently moves
And as wind in paddy fields
Heard in the merry music night
Trembling lamps in huts are eyes
Of each goddess defending slumber
Wind with melody met those lights
Eyelids widened at once eyeing
Lie little ones in mothers' lap
Deep in sleep they smile a lot
Wind with melody met those babes
Sang and sighed of innocent infants
Fire framed coffin frees a soul
Sad notes played on moments' thought
Wind is back near widow faint
How to console, there feels its failure!
00287--FEAST OF LAMPS
FEAST OF LAMPS
Lit clay lamps must be merry this day,
For the Goddess won out the evil.
God and Goddess cast their eyes down,
And see the earth, another starry sky.
On the river banks and by the waysides,
Thousand lambs nodding as wind waves.
For these moments the moon is jealous,
Around him the stars are still,
But lucky few float down the streams.
Hanging stars might wish a fall.
The feast of lamps will end after hours,
A street boy may set out in the next morn,
And pick up a firework that was failed,
And say: “more must be left, for much was heard.”
00286--MYSTERY
MYSTERY
Unkind with nightmares night grew
Restless seas sounded deep thoughts
Dragging in the street like a drunkard
Bad fate stepped into human lives
Sighs of widows blew out the candles
Wandering souls sang melodies mysterious
Earthy mourns rose and darkened the sky
That of fancies floating strange and plenty
A huge mortuary at night the world is
Waiting to know the taste of soil
When freed from one slave of other
When broke all arms slave of death.
00285--THE WINNER
THE WINNER
I win this game
Though am defeated
And in fair light
Even if the sun is set
All flowers known to me
Not from gardens
And all melodies
I heard in silence
I am the happy child
In my sick bed
They did destroy me
And now cry
For me pretending
But I do win
This game of life
For never they knew
To love forgetting the self
And I did it
To her, to that heart
Thus I do win
(Though their deeds
Did destroy me)
This game, game of both
Love and life.
00284-- THE QUOTES
THE QUOTES
The God was nabbed
By all beggars
They said:
“You emptied our pots of coins!”
Their wives said:
“You gave us nightmares!”
Sons cried out:
“Away you took our toys!”
The God said:
“Sorry am I to do it again!”
00283--PRAYER OF A WIDOW
PRAYER OF A WIDOW
O God!
This roof,
These walls,
The raining out,
Shouting thunder,
Sharp lightning,
My worthless love,
And ignored flesh;
All that
My lord
Is my prayer!
00282--CUP OF TEA
CUP OF TEA
The old man and his dog were old.
Who would die first?
It was the question we had,
In minds as we saw them.
“My cup of tea”' the man would say, “is bitter,
I must have the last drop of it,though.”
But they both lived long enough to see,
The death of many,
Who n'er loved a dog.
00281--FORBIDDEN FRUIT
FORBIDDEN FRUIT
Apples have always been
Forbidden fruits for me
So when she asked
What name would I call her
I said: A P P L E !
00280--EASTER
EASTER
EASTER
Long ago
On a starry midnight
With the moon's fullest face
The Holy Grave was opened
'Jesus' read the grave stone
Only the whore saw him
In his real handsomeness
Today
The church bell tolls
They feast and sing merrily
Beggars are with hope
The young ones shake hands
Lover's eyes in constant contact
The priest lifts his hands
To bless all devils
Christ is gone
The earth is an empty grave
Why should we light candles
And deck the vacant one
Where must I take you
To meet my living Christ
Need not come with me
Behold! Behold!
Around you and everywhere
In those pale faces
Where there is agony
Their lives are three days
Humiliation,poverty and death
A walk between Good Friday and Easter.
EASTER
Long ago
On a starry midnight
With the moon's fullest face
The Holy Grave was opened
'Jesus' read the grave stone
Only the whore saw him
In his real handsomeness
Today
The church bell tolls
They feast and sing merrily
Beggars are with hope
The young ones shake hands
Lover's eyes in constant contact
The priest lifts his hands
To bless all devils
Christ is gone
The earth is an empty grave
Why should we light candles
And deck the vacant one
Where must I take you
To meet my living Christ
Need not come with me
Behold! Behold!
Around you and everywhere
In those pale faces
Where there is agony
Their lives are three days
Humiliation,poverty and death
A walk between Good Friday and Easter.
00279--DEATH AT CHRISTMAS EVE
DEATH AT CHRISTMAS EVE
Chilly morns of December windy
Sunny noons and nights starry
Angels sing Holy X-mas nearly
Three pigs knew nothing newly
Did mate and sleep in pigsty
Happiness in thick mud is lucky
At X-mas eve pigs all the way
Saw strangely and a butterfly
And wished if they could fly
With such wings coloured fully
Hanging stars around houses shiny
And thought how lit it likely
Reached a dark hut stood humbly
“Jesus” the butcher slowly did pray
And his long knife straight and dry
Entering into their necks steady
One by one they died bloody
“Jesus” the butcher uttered happily.
00278--BREEZE AND BLOOMS
BREEZE AND BLOOMS
Wind streams through flowery boughs
They nod, nod their blossom heads
Breeze and blooms all a dance
Some bees keep away still and staring
Now wind goes bidding farewell
Shed flowers on the soil left
As some tears that for love fallen
But sure the boughs will bear again
Lovely blooms for passing wind
It'll be back in the month of spring
For to carry heavenly perfumes
Though must shed and depart sadly.
00277--LULLABY
LULLABY
Lullaby...mother's lullaby...
Do come cradle cries;
Late mother beyond skies,
Sings no more gentle songs.
What that meadow, gives you bed,
For the nights of lonesome breath?
Who the god that serves you through,
All the winter's chilly morns?
Now the wings of wind you be,
Wave the love at orphan-sighs.
Bid true farewell to all likes,
To be the rhythmic notes of joy.
Rock his cradle as she did,
Shed white feathers mist may come.
Move not away, he may wake,
To see the mother not in sight!
00276--I KILL ME OFTEN

I KILL ME OFTEN
True is it that I kill me often
In busy mornings with no guilt
Sweaty noons are made for the kill
And gloomy evenings fit so well
Eyes don't fill and face not pale
Still I'm murdering myself
True is it that I kill me often
When my words,my thoughts
I hide, and favour those I hate
I do scratch my bald, heavy head
Each scratch is but across my soul
It kills me,kills me more than once
True is it that I kill me often
When in times I witness an insult
But keep my dissent within myself
I do sigh, a sigh very deep
Each sigh but life breath of my soul
It kills me, kills me as if drowning
True is it that I kill me often
When in fear I withdraw a shout
When in shame I ignore a kinsman
When in greed I lick those gold nails
When in anger I curse who fed me
True is it that I kill me often
[Painting;Abstract Paintings By Keith Garrow]
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