SUBJECT INDEX:

LITERARY CRITICISM

"What is Literature?" and Other Essays
Jean-Paul Sartre
Introduction by Steven Ungar
What is Literature? challenges anyone who writes as if literature could be extricated from history or society. But Sartre does more than indict. He offers a definitive statement about the phenomenology of reading, and he goes on to provide a dashing example of how to write a history of literature that takes ideology and institutions into account.
Paperback 1988 / Hardcover 1988
The Life and Miracles of Thekla
Scott Fitzgerald Johnson
The Life and Miracles of Thekla offers a unique view on the reception of classical and early Christian literature in Late Antiquity. This study examines the Life and Miracles as an intricate example of Greek writing and attempts to situate the work amidst a wealth of similar literary forms from the classical world.
Paperback 2006
Srngaraprakasa of Bhoja, Part 1,
Venkatarama Raghavan
This edition is based on new manuscripts of this important treatise on classical Sanskrit poetics. It was composed by the famous eleventh-century King Bhoja of Malwa (W. India), a patron of traditional learning. The text has never received a complete critical edition. It is important not only because of the theoretical treatment of the erotic sentiment (srngara) in classical Sanskrit texts. It is also a mine of quotations from extant and also from lost Sanskrit and Prakrit poetical texts.
Hardcover 1999
Absent without Leave
Denis Hollier
Translated by Catherine Porter
Georges Bataille, Michel Leiris, Roger Caillois, André Malraux, the early Jean-Paul Sartre--these were writers torn between politics and the pleasures of the text, maturing in the 1930s and 1940s in a world that would have no place for literature. And yet it was the work of these writers that shaped French literature--influencing Derrida, Foucault, de Man, Deleuze, and Ricoeur--and so profoundly affected literary enterprise in the English-speaking world since 1968. This literary history, the prehistory of postmodernism, is what Hollier recovers in his interlocking studies of the main figures of French literary life before the age of anxiety gave way to the era of existentialist commitment.
Paperback 1997 / Hardcover 1997
Accidental Incest, Filial Cannibalism, and Other Peculiar Encounters in Late Imperial Chinese Literature
Tina Lu
Writers of late imperial fiction and drama were, Lu argues, deeply engaged with questions about the nature of the Chinese empire and of the human community. This book traces how these political questions were addressed in fiction through extreme situations: husbands and wives torn apart in periods of political upheaval, families so disrupted that incestuous encounters become inevitable, times so desperate that people have to sell themselves to be eaten.
Hardcover 2009
Actors in the Audience
Shadi Bartsch
This is a book about language, theatricality, and empire--about how the Roman emperor dramatized his rule and how his subordinates in turn staged their response. Informed by theories of dramaturgy, sociology, new historicism, and cultural criticism, this close reading of literary and historical texts gives us a new perspective on the politics of the Roman empire--and on the languages and representation of power.
Hardcover 1998
Advertisements for Myself
Norman Mailer
Originally published in 1959, Advertisements for Myself is an inventive collection of stories, essays, polemic, meditations, and interviews. It is Mailer at his brilliant, provocative, outrageous best.
Paperback
Aelian, I, On the Characteristics of Animals, I
Aelian
Translated by A. F. Scholfield
Aelian's Characteristics of Animals is an appealing collection of facts and fables about the animal kingdom that invites the reader to ponder contrasts between human and animal behavior.
Hardcover 1958
Aelian, II, On the Characteristics of Animals, II
Aelian
Translated by A. F. Scholfield
Hardcover
Aelian, III, On the Characteristics of Animals, III
Aelian
Translated by A. F. Scholfield
Hardcover
Aelian, IV, Historical Miscellany
Aelian
Translated by Nigel G. Wilson
Aelian's Historical Miscellany (Varia Historia) is a pleasurable example of light reading for Romans of the early third century. Offering engaging anecdotes about historical figures, retellings of legendary events, and enjoyable descriptive pieces, Aelian's collection of nuggets and narratives appealed to a wide reading public.
Hardcover 1997
Aeschylus, I, Persians. Seven against Thebes. Suppliants. Prometheus Bound
Aeschylus
Edited and translated by Alan H. Sommerstein
Aeschylus (ca. 525–456 BCE) is the dramatist who made Athenian tragedy one of the world’s great art forms. Seven of his eighty or so plays survive complete. The first volume of this new Loeb Classical Library edition offers fresh texts and translations by Alan H. Sommerstein of Persians, the only surviving Greek historical drama.
Hardcover 2009
Aeschylus, II, Oresteia: Agamemnon. Libation-Bearers. Eumenides
Aeschylus
Edited and translated by Alan H. Sommerstein
Aeschylus (ca. 525–456 BCE) is the dramatist who made Athenian tragedy one of the world’s great art forms. Seven of his eighty or so plays survive complete. The second volume contains the complete Oresteia trilogy.
Hardcover 2009
Aeschylus, III, Fragments
Aeschylus
Edited and translated by Alan H. Sommerstein
Aeschylus (ca. 525–456 BCE) is the dramatist who made Athenian tragedy one of the world’s great art forms. Seven of his eighty or so plays survive complete. The third volume of this edition collects all the major fragments of lost Aeschylean plays.
Hardcover 2008
The Aesthetics of Chaosmos
Umberto Eco
Translated by Ellen Esrock
David Robey, Introductory note
Paperback 1989
Affecting Fictions
Jane F. Thrailkill
What happens when the cerebral encounters the corporeal? In this study, what emerges is an important vision of late-nineteenth-century American realist literature and the role of emotion and physiology in literary criticism. Thrailkill offers a new understanding of American literary realism that draws on neuroscience and cognitive psychology, positioning her argument against the emotionless interpretations of the New Critics.
Hardcover 2007
Affective Mapping
Jonathan Flatley
The surprising claim of this book is that dwelling on loss is not necessarily depressing. Instead, embracing melancholy can be a road back to contact with others and can lead people to productively remap their relationship to the world around them. Flatley demonstrates that a seemingly disparate set of modernist writers and thinkers showed how aesthetic activity can give us the means to comprehend and change our relation to loss.
Hardcover 2008
Alexander A. Potebnja's Psycholinguistic Theory of Literature
John Fizer
The work of Potebnja, a leading Ukrainian linguist of the nineteenth century, has significantly influenced modern literary criticism, particularly Russian formalism and structuralism. Yet despite his remarkable achievements in linguistics and literary theory, Potebnja's work was officially renounced in the Soviet Union in the 1930s, and in the West he remains virtually unknown. In his study, John Fizer carefully reconstructs Potebnja's theory of literature from the psycholinguistic formulations found in his works on language, mythology, and folklore.
Hardcover 1988
Alexander Pope
John Paul Russo
Hardcover 1972
Alien Kind
Rania Huntington
To discuss the supernatural in China is "to talk of foxes and speak of ghosts." Ming and Qing China were well populated with foxes, shape-changing creatures who transgressed the boundaries of species, gender, and the metaphysical realm. In human form, foxes were both immoral succubi and good wives/good mothers, both tricksters and Confucian paragons. They were the most alien yet the most common of the strange creatures a human might encounter. Rania Huntington investigates a conception of one kind of alien and attempts to establish the boundaries of the human. Each section of this book traces a particular boundary violated by the fox and examines how maneuvers across that boundary change over time.
Hardcover 2004
Allegory, Myth, and Symbol
Morton Bloomfield
Hardcover / Paperback
American Babel
Edited by Marc Shell
Paperback 2002 / Hardcover 2002
The American Enlightenment, 1750-1820
Robert A. Ferguson
This concise literary history of the American Enlightenment captures the varied and conflicting voices of religious and political conviction in the decades when the new nation was formed. Ferguson's trenchant interpretation yields new understanding of this pivotal period for American culture.
Paperback 1997
American Incarnation
Myra Jehlen
In exploring the origins and character of the American liberal tradition, Jehlen begins with the proposition that the decisive factor that shaped the European settlers' idea of "America" or the "American" was material rather than conceptual--it was the physical fact of the land. European settlers came to a continent on which they had no history, bringing the ideology of liberal individualism, which they projected onto the land itself. They believed the continent proclaimed that individuals were born in nature and freely made their own society.
Hardcover 1986 / Paperback
The American Newness
Irving Howe
What is the Emersonian spirit? What inspired it, what propelled it? And what does it mean to us today? Howe lays before us the intellectual and personal tragedy of the first great American man of letters, yet also shows that Emerson's belief in the untapped power of free men pervades not only the lives and works of his contemporaries but is also a permanent part of the American psyche.
Hardcover 1986
American Poetry and Culture, 1945-1980
Robert Von Hallberg

Challenging the common perception of poets as standing apart from the mainstream of American culture, Robert von Hallberg gives us a fresh and unpredictable assessment of the poetry that has come directly out of the American experience since 1945.

Hardcover 1985 / Paperback 1988
American Protest Literature
With a Foreword by John Stauffer and an Afterword by Howard Zinn
Edited by Zoe Trodd
Foreword by John Stauffer
Afterword by Howard Zinn
"I like a little rebellion now and then," wrote Thomas Jefferson to Abigail Adams, enlisting in a tradition that throughout American history has led writers to rage and reason, prophesy and provoke. American Protest Literature presents sources from eleven protest movements--political, social, and cultural--from the Revolution to abolition to gay rights to antiwar protest. In this impressive work, Trodd provides an enlightening and inspiring survey of this most American form of literature.
Hardcover 2006 / Paperback 2008
Amphoteroglossia
Panagiotis Roilos
This work offers the first systematic and interdisciplinary study of the poetics of the twelfth-century medieval Greek novel. Rollos investigates the complex ways in which rhetorical theory and practice constructed the overarching cultural aesthetics that conditioned the production and reception of the genre of the novel in Byzantine society.
Paperback 2006
An American Procession
Alfred Kazin
In this illuminating study of the "crucial century" (1830-1930), Alfred Kazin views the major figures in American writing, beginning in the 1830s when Ralph Waldo Emerson founded a national literature on the basis of a religious revolution, and ending on the eve of the 1930s with modernism--Eliot, Pound, Hemingway, Fitzgerald--and with the revelation of the "postponed power" of those who had been modern before their time--Henry Adams, Melville, Whitman, Dickinson.
Paperback 1996
An Appetite for Poetry
Frank Kermode
This is a book in which Kermode asks the reader to share his pleasure in the literature of a set of major writers--Milton, Eliot, Stevens. Other essays draw our attention to debates on the literary canon and problems of biblical criticism and their implications for the study of narrative in particular and the interpretation of secular literary texts in general.
Hardcover 1989
An Early Tibetan Survey of Buddhist Literature
Edited by Kurtis R. Schaeffer
Edited by Leonard W. J. van der Kuijp
This volume is a study and edition of Bcom Idan ral gri's (1227-1305) Bstan pa rgyas pa rgyan gyi nyi 'od. Likely composed in the last decades of the thirteenth century, this systematic list of Buddhist Sutras, Tantras, Shastras, and related genres translated primarily from Sanskrit and other Indic languages holds an important place in the history of Buddhist literature in Tibet.
Hardcover 2008
An Introductory Bibliography to the Study of Hungarian Literature
Albert Tezla
Hardcover 1964
An Orthodox Pomjanyk of the Seventeenth-Eighteenth Centuries
Edited by Moshe Altbauer
Ihor Sevcenko, With the Collaboration of
Bohdan Struminsky, With the Collaboration of
This is a publication of a diptych in which names of the dead and living Orthodox faithful with members of their families (including tsars, princes, patriarchs of Muscovy, and Ukrainian hetmans) were entered by emissaries of St. Catherine's Monastery to Muscovy, the Ukrainian Hetmanate, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Crimea, and the Ottoman Empire from the 1630s to the 1730s in exchange for alms for the monastery and the prayers of its monks.
Hardcover 1990
The Anarchy of Empire in the Making of U.S. Culture
Amy Kaplan
Kaplan shows how U.S. imperialism--from "Manifest Destiny" to the "American Century"--has profoundly shaped key elements of American culture at home, and how the struggle for power over foreign peoples and places has disrupted the quest for domestic order. In literature, journalism, film, political speeches, and legal documents, Kaplan traces the undeniable connections between American efforts to quell anarchy abroad and the eruption of such anarchy at the heart of the empire.
Hardcover 2003 / Paperback 2005
André Gide
Alan Sheridan
In this literary biography of Gide, an intimate portrait of the reluctantly public man emerges. Following Gide from his first forays among the Symbolists through his sexual and political awakenings to his worldwide fame as a writer, sage, and commentator on his age, Sheridan richly conveys the drama of a remarkable life; the depth, breadth, and vitality of an incomparable oeuvre; and the spirit of a time that both so aptly expressed.
Hardcover 1999 / Paperback 2000
The Anglo-Saxon Poems in Bright's Anglo-Saxon Reader
Francis Peabody Magoun
Hardcover 1969
Antonio Machado
Translated by Alan S. Trueblood
Antonio Machado
Hardcover 1982 / Paperback
Apollonius of Tyana, I
Philostratus
Edited and translated by Christopher P. Jones
This biography of a first-century C.E. holy man has become one of the most widely discussed literary works of later antiquity. With an engaging style, Philostratus portrays a charismatic teacher and religious reformer from Tyana in Cappadocia (modern central Turkey) who travels across the known world, from the Atlantic to the Ganges. His miracles, which include extraordinary cures and mysterious disappearances, together with his apparent triumph over death, caused pagans to make Apollonius a rival to Jesus of Nazareth.
Hardcover 2005
Apollonius of Tyana, II
Philostratus
Edited and translated by Christopher P. Jones
This biography of a first-century C.E. holy man has become one of the most widely discussed literary works of later antiquity. With an engaging style, Philostratus portrays a charismatic teacher and religious reformer from Tyana in Cappadocia (modern central Turkey) who travels across the known world, from the Atlantic to the Ganges. His miracles, which include extraordinary cures and mysterious disappearances, together with his apparent triumph over death, caused pagans to make Apollonius a rival to Jesus of Nazareth.
Hardcover
Apollonius of Tyana, III
Philostratus
Edited and translated by Christopher P. Jones
Philostratus's colorful biography of Apollonius of Tyana provoked a long-lasting debate between pagans and Christians. This new translation of Apollonius's letters reveals his personality and his religious and philosophical ideas. The bishop Eusebius's reply to Hierocles' use of the biography in an anti-Christian polemic is an essential chapter in the history of Philostratus's masterpiece. New for this edition is a selection of ancient reports about Apollonius from authors such as St. Jerome and St. Augustine.
Hardcover 2006
The Apostolic Fathers, I, I Clement. II Clement. Ignatius. Polycarp. Didache
Edited and translated by Bart D. Ehrman
The writings of the Apostolic Fathers give a rich and diverse picture of Christian life and thought in the period immediately after New Testament times. Some of them were accorded almost Scriptural authority in the early Church. This new Loeb edition reflects the latest scholarship.
Hardcover 2003
The Apostolic Fathers, II, Epistle of Barnabas. Papias and Quadratus. Epistle to Diognetus. The Shepherd of Hermas
Edited and translated by Bart D. Ehrman
The writings of the Apostolic Fathers give a rich and diverse picture of Christian life and thought in the period immediately after New Testament times. Some of them were accorded almost Scriptural authority in the early Church. This new Loeb edition of these essential texts reflects current idiom and the latest scholarship.
Hardcover 2003
The Arcades Project
Walter Benjamin
Edited by Rolf Tiedemann
Translated by Howard Eiland
Translated by Kevin McLaughlin
Conceived in Paris in 1927 and still in progress when Benjamin fled the Occupation in 1940, The Arcades Project is Benjamin's effort to represent and to critique the bourgeois experience of nineteenth-century history, and, in so doing, to liberate the suppressed "true history" that underlay the ideological mask. Preoccupied with the commodification of things and focusing on the arcades of nineteenth-century Paris--glass-roofed rows of shops that were early centers of consumerism--Benjamin presents a montage of quotations from, and reflections on, hundreds of published sources, arranging them in thirty-six categories with descriptive rubrics such as "Fashion," "Boredom," "Catacombs," "Prostitution," and "Theory of Progress."
Hardcover 1999 / Paperback 2002
Archilochos Heros
Diskin Clay
The discovery of the Mnesiepes inscription on Paros revealed the third century B.C. belief that the young Archilochos was transformed into a poet by an encounter with the Muses. It also revealed that the poet had become the object of a cult by his fellow islanders as he was transformed in death to a local hero. This is the first attempt to trace the history of this cult and addresses for the first time the larger phenomenon of the cult of poets in the Greek states.
Paperback 2005
Argonautica
Apollonius Rhodius
Edited and translated by William H. Race
Argonautica, composed in the 3rd century BCE, is the epic retelling of Jason’s quest for the golden fleece. It greatly influenced Roman authors such as Catullus, Virgil, and Ovid, and was imitated by Valerius Flaccus. This new edition of the first volume in the Loeb Classical Library offers a fresh translation and improved text.
Hardcover 2009
Arguing the Modern Jewish Canon
Edited by Justin Daniel Cammy
Edited by Dara Horn
Edited by Alyssa Quint
Edited by Rachel Rubinstein
Ruth Wisse is a leading scholar of Yiddish and Jewish literary studies and one of our most fearless public intellectuals on issues relating to Jewish society and culture. In this celebratory volume, Wisse's colleagues pay tribute to her with a collection of critical essays whose subjects break new ground in Yiddish, Hebrew, Israeli, American, European, and Holocaust literature.
Hardcover 2009
Aristophanes, III, Birds. Lysistrata. Women at the Thesmophoria
Aristophanes
Edited and translated by Jeffrey Henderson
In Birds Aristophanes turns from the pointed political satire characteristic of earlier plays to a fantasy that soars literally into the air and creates a utopian counter-Athens, called Cloudcuckooland, ruled by birds. Lysistrata blends rambunctious comedy and an earnest call for peace. Lysistrata, our first comic heroine, organizes a panhellenic conjugal strike of young wives until their husbands end the war between Athens and Sparta. Athenian women again take center stage in Women at the Thesmophoria, this time to punish Euripides for portraying them as wicked. Parody of Euripides' plots enlivens this witty confrontation of the sexes.
Hardcover 2000
Aristophanes, IV, Frogs. Assemblywomen. Wealth
Aristophanes
Edited and translated by Jeffrey Henderson
Frogswas produced in 405 BCE, shortly after the deaths of Sophocles and Euripides. Dionysus, on a journey to the underworld to retrieve Euripides, is recruited to judge a contest between the traditional Aeschylus and the modern Euripides, a contest that yields both comedy and insight on ancient literary taste. In Assemblywomen Athenian women plot to save Athens from male misgovernance. They institute a new social order in which all inequalities based on wealth, age, and beauty are eliminated--with raucously comical results. The gentle humor and straightforward morality of Wealth made it the most popular of Aristophanes' plays from classical times to the Renaissance. Here the god Wealth, cured of his blindness, is newly able to distinguish good people from bad.
Hardcover 2002
Aristophanes, V, Fragments
Aristophanes
Edited and translated by Jeffrey Henderson
Over forty plays by Aristophanes were read in antiquity, of which nearly a thousand fragments survive. These provide a fuller picture of the poet's ever astonishing comic vitality and a wealth of information and insights about his world. Henderson's latest volume contains what survives from, and about, his lost plays. Each fragmentary play is prefaced by a summary. Also included in this edition are ancient reports about Aristophanes' life, works, and influence on the later comic tradition.
Hardcover 2008
Art Inscribed
Emilie L. Bergmann
Hardcover
Art in the Light of Conscience
Marina Tsvetaeva
Translated and with an Introduction by Angela Livingstone
In the Soviet Union, as in the West, Marina Tsvetaeva (1892-4941) is acknowledged to be one of the great Russian poets of the century, along with Mandelstam, Pasternak and Akhmatova. Overnight sensation and oft-times pariah, Tsvetaeva was a poet of extraordinary intensity whose work continues to be discovered by new readers. Yet, while she is considered to be one of the major influences on modern Soviet poetry, few know of her consummate gifts as a writer of prose. These select essays, most of which have never been available in translation before, display the dazzlingly original prose style and the powerful, dialogic voice of a poet who would like to make art’s mystery accessible without diminishing it.
Hardcover 1992
The Art of Bacchylides
Anne Pippin Burnett
Burnett shows us the art of Bacchylides in the context of Greek lyric traditions. She discusses the beginnings of choral poetry and the functions of the choral myth; she describes the purposes of the victory song in particular and the practices of Bacchylides and Pindar as they fulfilled their victory commissions. In analyzing individual poems Burnett's approach is two-fold, for each ode is seen as a choral performance reflecting archaic cult practice, while it is also studied as the expression of a particular poetic vision and sensibility.
Hardcover 1985
The Art of Plato
R. B. Rutherford
This book is not a study of Plato's philosophy, but a contribution to the literary interpretation of the dialogues, through analysis of their formal structure, characterization, language, and imagery. Among the dialogues considered in these interrelated essays are some of Plato's most admired and influential works, including Gorgias, the Symposium, the Republic and Phaedrus.
Hardcover 1998
The Art of Shakespeare's Sonnets
Helen Vendler
Helen Vendler, widely regarded as our most accomplished interpreter of poetry, here serves as an incomparable guide to some of the best-loved poems in the English language. In detailed commentaries on Shakespeare's 154 sonnets, Vendler reveals previously unperceived imaginative and stylistic features of the poems, pointing out not only new levels of import in particular lines, but also the ways in which the four parts of each sonnet work together to enact emotion and create dynamic effect.
Mixed 1997 / Paperback 1999
The Art of Telling
Frank Kermode
Kermode assesses the revolutionary transformations in literary criticism over the last fifteen years and places them in historical perspective. Examining novels ranging in scope from a 1907 bestseller to the avant-garde works of various periods, he includes such writers as Conrad, Ford Madox Ford, Michel Butor, and Thomas Pynchon.
Hardcover 1983 / Paperback
Arthur Hugh Clough
Evelyn Greenberger
In this fresh examination of Clough, Greenberger traces the intellectual development of a poet who was considered a brilliant failure in his own day, a reputation that still persists despite the fact that Clough is now attracting considerable critical attention. Her study contradicts this traditional view of him as ineffectual and uncommitted and reveals instead a complex figure whose varied interests enriched his prose and poetry.
Hardcover 1970
Arts of Impoverishment
Leo Bersani
Ulysse Dutoit
Paperback / Hardcover
At Home in the World
Timothy Brennan
Timothy Brennan's passionate book is a bracing critique of the critical self-indulgence that calls itself cosmopolitanism. Brennan traces his subject from George Orwell to Julia Kristeva, from "third world" writing to the Nobel Prize. A critical call to arms, At Home in the World strips the false and heedless from the new cosmopolitanism in order to revitalize the idea.
Paperback 1997 / Hardcover 1997
Augustine the Reader
Brian Stock
Augustine of Hippo, a central figure in the history of Western thought, is also the author of a theory of reading that has had a profound influence on Western letters from the ages of Petrarch, Montaigne, Luther, and Rousseau to Freud and our own time. Brian Stock provides the first full account of this theory within the evolution of Augustine's early dialogues, his Confessions, and his systematic treatises.
Hardcover 1996 / Paperback 1998
Authenticity and Fiction in the Russian Literary Journey, 1790-1840
Andreas Schönle
In the decades before and during the rise of the Russian novel, a new form of prose writing took hold in Russia: travel accounts, often fictional, marked by a fully developed narrator's voice, interpretive impressions, scenic descriptions, and extended narrative. In illuminating analyses of major texts as well as lesser known but influential works, Andreas Schönle surveys the literary travelogue from its emergence in Russia to the end of the Romantic era.
Hardcover 2000
The Bab Ballads
W. S. Gilbert
Edited by James Ellis
W. S. Gilbert, renowned author of the Savoy Operas, was also the creator of the Bab Ballads--"possibly the best comic verse--and surely the best illustrated--in the English language," according to James Ellis. Gilbert published these poems, together with his own, grotesque drawings signed "Bab," a childhood nickname, in Fun and other magazines in the late nineteenth century. In 1898, the older and by then distinguished Gilbert substituted pallid and inoffensive drawings for the originals, which he had come to believe "erred gravely in the direction of unnecessary extravagance." Since then the ballads have been collected and published in various editions, most of which have featured the revised drawings and only a selection of the poems. This is the only book to offer the complete collection of ballads with all original illustrations, a tribute to the comic genius of a writer known as "the most original dramatist of his generation."
Hardcover 1970 / Paperback 2003
Baiae
Giovanni Gioviano Pontano
Translated by Rodney G. Dennis
Giovanni Gioviano Pontano was an important humanist and scholar of Renaissance Italy. He was also the most innovative and versatile Latin poet of Quattrocento Italy. His Two Books of Hendecasyllables, given the subtitle Baiae, are the elegant offspring of Pontano's leisure, written to celebrate love, good wine, friendship, nature, and all the pleasures of life to be found at the seaside resort of Baiae on the Bay of Naples.
Hardcover 2006
Baldo, Volume 1, Books I-XII
Teofilo Folengo
Translated by Ann E. Mullaney
Folengo (1491-1544) was a native of Mantua and a member of the Benedictine order, later to become a runaway monk and satirist. Blending Latin and various Italian dialects in a deliberately droll manner, Baldo follows a sort of French royal juvenile delinquent through imprisonment, fantastical adventures, and a journey to the underworld. This edition provides the first English translation of this hilarious send-up of the ancient epic and Renaissance chivalric romance traditions.
Hardcover 2007
Baldo, Volume 2, Books XIII-XXV
Teofilo Folengo
Translated by Ann E. Mullaney
Folengo (1491–1544) was born in Mantua and joined the Benedictine order, but became a runaway monk and a satirist of monasticism. In 1517 he published, under the pseudonym Merlin Cocaio, the first version of his macaronic narrative poem Baldo. This edition provides the first English translation of this hilarious send-up of ancient epic and Renaissance chivalric romance.
Hardcover 2008
The Ballad and Oral Literature
Edited by Joseph Harris
Paperback 1991 / Hardcover 1991
Barbaric Traffic
Philip Gould
Studying the rhetoric of various antislavery genres, Gould exposes the close relation between antislavery writings and commercial capitalism. By distinguishing between good commerce, or the importing of commodities that refined manners, and bad commerce, like the slave trade, the literature offered both a critique and an outline of acceptable forms of commercial capitalism. A challenge to the premise that objections to the slave trade were rooted in modern laissez-faire capitalism, Gould's work revises--and expands--our understanding of antislavery literature as a form of cultural criticism in its own right.
Hardcover 2003
Barbarolexis
Alexandre Leupin
Translated by Kate M. Cooper
Hardcover 1989
Be Always Converting, Be Always Converted
Rob Wilson
Hardcover 2009
Beacon Fire and Shooting Star
Xiaofei Tian
The Liang dynasty (502-557) was one of the most brilliant and creative periods in Chinese history and is one of the most underestimated and misunderstood. This book is devoted to contextualizing the literary culture of this era, exploring not only the literary works themselves but also the processes of literary production and the intricate interactions of religion and literature.
Hardcover 2007
The Beauty and the Book
Ellen Widmer
This study of Chinese women in the book trade begins with three case studies, each of which probes one facet of the relationship between women and fiction in the early nineteenth century. Building on these case studies, the second half of the book focuses on the many sequels to the Dream of the Red Chamber and the significance of this novel for women. As Ellen Widmer shows, by the end of the century, women became increasingly involved in the novel as critical readers, writers, and editors.
Hardcover 2006
Belief and Resistance
Barbara H. Smith
What happens to law, science, and the pursuit of social justice when the ideas of truth, reason and objectivity are rejected? This question is at the heart of the controversies between traditionalists and "postmodernists." Barbara Herrnstein Smith here examines the debate across a wide range of disciplines and through important and ongoing controversies.
Paperback 1997 / Hardcover 1997
Ben Jonson
David Riggs
Hardcover 1989 / Paperback
Ben Jonson's Parodic Strategy
Robert N. Watson
Hardcover 1987
Benjamin's -abilities
Samuel Weber
In this book, Weber, a leading theorist on literature and media, reveals a new and productive aspect of Benjamin’s thought by focusing the critical suffix “-ability” that Benjamin so tellingly deploys in his work. The result is an illuminating perspective on Benjamin’s thought by way of his language—and one of the most penetrating and comprehensive accounts of Benjamin’s work ever written.
Hardcover 2008
Berlin Childhood around 1900
Walter Benjamin
Translated by Howard Eiland
Not an autobiography in the customary sense, Walter Benjamin's Berlin Childhood around 1900 is a recollection of his childhood in an upper-middle-class Jewish home in Berlin's West End at the turn of the century. In this diagram of his life, Benjamin focuses not on persons or events but on places and things, all seen from the perspective of a child. This book is one of Benjamin's great city texts, bringing to life the cocoon of his childhood--the parks, streets, schoolrooms, and interiors of an emerging metropolis.
Paperback 2006
Between History and Literature
Lionel Gossman
Drawing on essays written over the course of a distinguished teaching career, Gossman illuminates the many facets of the problematic relationship between history and literature and shows how each discipline both challenges and undermines the other's absolutist pretensions. His detailed inquiries into the work of the Romantic historians and his thoughtful reflections on his own assumptions and practices as a scholar exemplify the highest ideals of humanistic scholarship.
Hardcover 1990
Beyond Egotism
Robert Kiely
Hardcover 1980
Beyond the Land Itself
Marcia B. Kline
Hardcover
The Bible As It Was
James L. Kugel
This is a guide to the Hebrew Bible unlike any other. Leading us chapter by chapter through its most important stories--from the Creation and the Tree of Knowledge through the Exodus from Egypt and the journey to the Promised Land--James Kugel shows how a group of anonymous ancient interpreters radically transformed the Bible and made it into the book that has come down to us today.
Hardcover 1997 / Paperback 1999
A Bibliography of Studies and Translations of Modern Chinese Literature, 1918-1942
Donald Gibbs
Yun-chen Li
Hardcover 1975
Black Doves Speak
Rosaria Munson
In Greek thought, barbaroi are utterers of unintelligible or inarticulate sounds. What importance does the text of Herodotus's Histories attribute to language as a criterion of ethnic identity? The answer to this question illuminates the empirical foundations of Herodotus's pluralistic worldview.
Paperback 2005
Black Fiction
Roger Rosenblatt
Hardcover 1974 / Paperback
Blessings in Disguise
Jean Starobinski
Translated by Arthur Goldhammer
Hardcover
Bloodstoppers and Bearwalkers
Richard M. Dorson
Folklore as it comes from the mouths of living storytellers has a matchless authority and conviction. Richard Dorson, living for five months among the Indians, Finns, Canadiens, Cornishmen, lumberjacks, sailors, miners, and sagamen of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, has listened to their tales, which this book reproduces with all their native thunder and salt. Rooted deep in storytelling tradition, these tales hark back to the frontier and immigrant past of an America shaped by many peoples with extraordinary experiences.
Paperback
Blows Like a Horn
Preston Whaley
Reopening the canons of the Beat Generation, Whaley traces the creative counterculture movement as it cooked in the heat of Bay Area streets and exploded into spectacles, such as the scandal of the Howl trial and the pop culture joke of beatnik caricatures. The book breaks new ground in showing how jazz, much more than an ambient soundtrack, shaped the very structures of Beat art and social life. The poetry, the music, the style--all of these helped transform U.S. culture in ways that are still with us.
Hardcover 2004
The Book of Korean Shijo
Edited and translated by Kevin O'Rourke
In this anthology of translations of 612 shijo, O'Rourke introduces the English reader to this venerable and witty style of verse. The anthology covers the entire range of shijo production from the tenth century to the modern era.
Hardcover 2002
The Book the Poet Makes
Peter Nohrnberg
Peter Nohrnberg asks the largely unexplored question of how and why a collection of lyrics is transformed into a unified book. Nohrnberg's subject is not the lyric sequence, a recognized form, but the ordinary collections of poems. For his examples the author dwells on Yeats's The Tower and Lowell's Life Studies.
Paperback
Boris Pasternak
Lazar Fleishman
Boris Pasternak has generally been regarded as an artist who was indifferent to the literary and political storms of his time. Fleishman gives the great writer's life a new perspective. He shows that Pasternak's entire literary career should be regarded as a complex and passionate response to constant changes in Russian cultural and social life.
Hardcover 1990
Brazil through the Eyes of William James
Maria Helena P.T. Machado
From 1865-1866, William James accompanied the director of the recently established Museum of Comparative Zoology on a research expedition to Brazil. This volume is a critical, bilingual (English-Portuguese) edition of his diaries and letters and also includes reproductions of his drawings. This original material belongs to the Houghton Archives at Harvard University and is of great interest to both William James scholars and Brazilian studies experts.
Hardcover 2006
The Breaking of Style
Helen Vendler
Opening fresh perspectives on the work of three very different poets, Helen Vendler's masterful study of changes in style yields a new view of the interplay of moral, emotional, and intellectual forces in a poet's work. Throughout, Vendler reminds us that what distinguishes successful poetry is a mastery of language at all levels--including the rhythmic, the grammatical, and the graphic.
Hardcover 1995 / Paperback
Breathing under Water and Other East European Essays
Stanislaw Baranczak
These superb essays focus on the role that culture, and particularly literature, has played in keeping the spirit of intellectual independence alive in Eastern and Central Europe. Exploring a variety of issues from censorship to underground poetry, Baranczak shows why, in societies where people struggle to survive under totalitarian rule, art is believed to have the power to make things happen.
Hardcover 1990 / Paperback 1992
A Bridge of Longing
David Roskies
This compelling history shows how Yiddish storytelling became the politics of rescue for successive generations of displaced Jewish artists, embodying their fervent hopes and greatest fears in the languages of tradition. Its protagonists are modern writers who returned to storytelling in the hope of harnessing the folk tradition, and who created copies that are better than the original.
Paperback 1996 / Hardcover 1998
Browning's Youth
John Maynard
Hardcover 1977
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume I, 'In my hot youth', 1798-1810
George Gordon Byron
Edited by Leslie A. Marchand
The first volume of Byron's letters and journals covers his early years and includes his first pilgrimage to Greece and to the East, ending with his last letter from Constantinople on July 4, 1810, before his departure for Athens. Here is the direct record of his rapid development from the serious schoolboy to the facetious youth with ambivalent reactions to his perplexed mother, and the maturing man of extraordinary perceptions and sympathies and friendships.
Hardcover 1973
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume II, 'Famous in my time', 1810-1812
George Gordon Byron
Edited by Leslie A. Marchand
Hardcover 1973
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume III, 'Alas! the love of women', 1813-1814
George Gordon Byron
Edited by Leslie A. Marchand
The third volume starts with Byron at the first crest of his fame following the publication of Childe Harold. It includes his literary letters to Tom Moore, frank and intimate ones to Hobhouse, pungent ones to Hanson and Murray, and his lively and amusing missives to Lady Melbourne, his confidante through all his love affairs.
Hardcover 1974
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume IV, 'Wedlock's the devil', 1814-1815
George Gordon Byron
Edited by Leslie A. Marchand
In this volume Byron corresponds with writers such as Thomas Moore, Coleridge, Leigh Hunt, and "Monk" Lewis, with John Murray about the publication of The Corsair, Lara, and the Hebrew Melodies, and with many personal friends. A new interest is his association with the Drury Lane Theater. The crucial events of his private life at this time are his engagement to Anabella Milbanke and their marriage early in 1815--a marriage that was to last little more than a year. Especially revelatory are his letters to his fiancée and those to his long-time confidante, Lady Melbourne.
Hardcover 1975
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume IX, 'In the wind's eye', 1821-1822
George Gordon Byron
Edited by Leslie A. Marchand
Hardcover
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume V, 'So late into the night', 1816-1817
George Gordon Byron
Edited by Leslie A. Marchand
In the fifth installment of this marvelous serial story, we read about Byron's separation from his wife. Besides his pleading letters to Annabella asking her to reconsider, there are level-headed letters to Murray and Hobhouse and Hunt and Rogers--all written during the tempestuous time before his final departure from England. The very best letters here are the ones from Italy; freed from the inhibitions of English society, Byron's spirit seems to expand and his letters reflect the joie de vivre that, despite his melancholy, was an inherent part of his character.
Hardcover 1976
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume VI, 'The flesh is frail', 1818-1819
George Gordon Byron
Edited by Leslie A. Marchand
Byron's epistolary saga continues con brio in this volume. At the start of 1818 he sends off the last canto of Childe Harold and abandons himself to the debaucheries of the Carnival in Venice. At the close of 1819 he resolves to return to England but instead follows Teresa Guiccioli to Ravenna. In the meantime he writes three long poems and two cantos of Don Juan, whose bowdlerization he violently protests; he breaks off with Marianna Segati, copes with his amorous "tigress" Margarita Cogni, then falls passionately in love with the young Countess Guiccioli; he thinks seriously of emigrating to South America; he takes custody of his little daughter Allegra and becomes increasingly fond of the child. The Shelleys visit him, as does Thomas Moore, to whom he entrusts his memoirs (burned after his death).
Hardcover 1976
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume VII, 'Between two worlds', 1820
George Gordon Byron
Edited by Leslie A. Marchand
Hardcover 1978
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume VIII, 'Born for opposition', 1821
George Gordon Byron
Edited by Leslie A. Marchand
Born for Opposition opens with Byron in Ravenna, in 1821. His passion for the Countess Guiccioli is subsiding into playful fondness, and he confesses to his sister Augusta that he is not "so furiously in love as at first." Italy, meanwhile, is afire with the revolutionary activities of the Carbornari, which Byron sees as "the very poetry of politics." His Journal, written while the insurrection grew, is a remarkable record of his reading and reflections while awaiting the sounds of gunfire.
Hardcover 1978
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume X, 'A heart for every fate', 1822-1823
George Gordon Byron
Edited by Leslie A. Marchand
Hardcover 1980
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume XI, 'For freedom's battle', 1823-1824
George Gordon Byron
Edited by Leslie A. Marchand
Hardcover 1981
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume XII, 'The trouble of an index', index
George Gordon Byron
Edited by Leslie A. Marchand
Hardcover 1982
Caesar
Mattias Gelzer
Translated by Peter Needham
The political career of one of the great statesmen of Antiquity--indeed of all times--is here captured in a full, authoritative, and lively biography that has long been a classic.
Hardcover / Paperback
The Canon
Constantine Cavafy
Translated by Stratis Haviaras
Foreword by Seamus Heaney
This volume of 154 poems by Constantine Cavafy is the entire body of work by the artist widely considered a master of modern Greek poetry. Published here in the original Greek, with a new English translation by the noted poet Stratis Haviaris on each facing page, and with a foreword by Seamus Heaney, The Canon is Cavafy, familiar and fresh, seen through new eyes, yet instantly recognized.
Paperback 2007
The Canon of Sir Thomas Wyatt's Poety
Richard Harrier
Hardcover 1975
Carlyle and the Burden of History
John D. Rosenberg
Hardcover 1986
Catullus
Catullus
Edited by Elmer Truesdell Merrill
Hardcover 1965
The Challenge of Comparative Literature
Claudio Guillen
Translated by Cola Franzen
Hardcover 1993 / Paperback
Charles Dickens
J. Hillis Miller
Hardcover 1958
Charles Olson
Robert Von Hallberg

Charles Olson is often described as one of the most influential American poets of the last quarter century; some would rather describe him as a cult figure, prophet of the Black Mountain poets and their descendants. Both judgments refer to an influence exerted as much through theories as through poems. Here is an examination of Olson's understanding of poetry that is cogent and a pleasure to read. It provides the framework needed for understanding Olson's work.

Hardcover 1978
Chaucer and The Legend of Good Women
Robert Worth Frank
Frank begins his analysis with a careful consideration of Chaucer's situation in 1386, the year he presumably began the Legend. It was, he suggests, a moment in his career propitious for change--change in subject and in art as well. The Legend reveals this change in the process of its accomplishment.
Hardcover 1972
Children of the Mire
Octavio Paz
Hardcover 1974 / Paperback
A Choice of Inheritance
David Bromwich
For the last two centuries, literature has tested the authority of the individual and the community. With a historical as well as an interpretative emphasis, Bromwich explores this tension. He shows why the public-mindedness of the eighteenth century is as limited a model for readers now as the individualism of the nineteenth century.
Hardcover 1989
Christianity and the Transformation of the Book
Anthony Grafton
Megan Williams
Christianity and the Transformation of the Book combines broad-gauged synthesis and close textual analysis to reconstruct the kinds of books and the ways of organizing scholarly inquiry and collaboration among the Christians of Caesarea, on the coast of Roman Palestine. The book explores the dialectical relationship between intellectual history and the history of the book, even as it expands our understanding of early Christian scholarship.
Hardcover 2006 / Paperback 2008
Cicero, XXVIII, Letters to Quintus and Brutus. Letter Fragments. Letter to Octavian. Invectives. Handbook of Electioneering
Cicero
Edited and translated by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
Cicero's letters to his brother, Quintus, allow us an intimate glimpse of their world. Vividly informative too is Cicero's correspondence with Brutus dating from the spring of 43 BCE, which conveys the drama of the period following the assassination of Julius Caesar. These are now made available in a new Loeb Classical Library edition. Shackleton Bailey also provides in this volume a new text and translation of two invective speeches purportedly delivered in the Senate; these are probably anonymous ancient schoolbook exercises but have long been linked with the works of Sallust and Cicero. The Letter to Octavian, ostensibly by Cicero but probably dating from the third or fourth century CE, is included as well. Here too is the "Handbook of Electioneering," a guide said to be written by Quintus to his brother, an interesting treatise on Roman elections.
Hardcover 2002
Ciceronian Controversies
Edited by JoAnn DellaNeva
Translated by Brian Duvick
The main literary dispute of the Renaissance pitted those Neo-Latin writers favoring Cicero alone as the apotheosis of Latin prose against those following an eclectic array of literary models. This Ciceronian controversy pervades the texts and letters collected for the first time in this volume. Addressing some of the most fundamental aspects of literary production, these quarrels shed light on similar debates about vernacular literature concerning imitation and the role of the author.
Hardcover 2007
City Scriptures
Murray Baumgarten

This richly suggestive book examines the common bonds of thought and shared manner of expression that unite Jewish writers working in America, Eastern Europe, and Israel. Murray Baumgarten shows how Jewish traditions are reflected in the themes and narrative style of a diverse group of writers, including Saul Bellow, Henry Roth, Sholom Aleichen, Isaac Babel, and S.Y. Agnon.

Hardcover
The Clash of Empires
Lydia H. Liu
This book brings to light the cultural legacy of sovereign thinking that emerged in the course of the violent meetings between the British Empire and the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). Lydia Liu demonstrates how the collision of imperial will and competing interests, rather than the civilizational attributes of existing nations and cultures, led to the invention of "China," "the East," "the West," and the modern notion of "the world" in recent history.
Hardcover 2004 / Paperback 2006
The Classic
Frank Kermode
Paperback
Closer to Home
Roger Sale
Hardcover 1986
Coercion to Speak
Aaron Fogel
Conrad's was a distinctive reading of the English language conditioned by his particular idea of forced speech and forced writing. Fogel shows how Conrad shaped ideas and events and interpreted character and institutions by means of dialogues representing not free exchange but various forms of forcing another to respond. Fogel proposes that to understand this form is to begin to reconsider our political and aesthetic assumptions about what dialogue is or ought to be.
Hardcover 1985
The Collected Prose of Robert Frost
Robert Frost
Edited by Mark Richardson
During his lifetime, Robert Frost notoriously resisted collecting his prose--going so far as to halt the publication of one prepared compilation and to "lose" the transcripts of the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures he delivered at Harvard in 1936. This volume allows readers and scholars to discover in the prose that he did make public--in newspapers, magazines, journals, speeches, and books--the wit, force, and grace that made his poetry famous.
Hardcover 2008
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume I, Nature, Addresses, and Lectures
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction and notes by Robert E. Spiller
Text established by Alfred R. Ferguson
Hardcover 1971
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume II, Essays: First Series
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction and notes by Joseph Slater
Text established by Alfred R. Ferguson
Text established by Jean Ferguson Carr
Some of Emerson's most famous essays, such as "Self-Reliance," "Compensation," and "The Over-Soul," appeared in his Essays of 1841. This edition provides the authoritative text of the Essays, with an introduction, notes, and supplementary material valuable for studying the evolution of Emerson's thought and style.
Hardcover 1980
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume III, Essays: Second Series
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction and notes by Joseph Slater
Text established by Alfred R. Ferguson
Text established by Jean Ferguson Carr
Emerson's second collection of essays appeared in 1844, when he was forty-one. It includes eight essays--"The Poet," "Experience," "Character," "Manners," "Gifts," "Nature," "Politics," and "Nominalist and Realist"--and one address, the much misunderstood "New England Reformers." Essays: Second Series has a lightness of tone and an irony absent from the earlier writings, but it is no less memorable: "a sermon to me," Carlyle wrote, "a real word."
Hardcover 1984
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume IV, Representative Men
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction and notes by Wallace E. Williams
Text established by Douglas Emory Wilson
Hardcover 1987
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume V, English Traits
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction by Philip Nicoloff
Notes by Robert E. Burkholder
Text established by Douglas Emory Wilson
English Traits is a searching and distinctive portrayal of English culture that today offers a revealing perspective on American viewpoints and preoccupations in the mid-nineteenth century. It is notable, too, for revealing an interesting side of Emerson's complex character; here we find Emerson the practical Yankee, analyzing English power, resourcefulness, determination, and materialism.
Hardcover
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume VI, The Conduct of Life
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction by Barbara L. Packer
Notes by Joseph Slater
Text Established by Douglas Emory Wilson
The essays in this book, first published in 1860, were developed from a series of lectures on "The Conduct of Life" delivered by Emerson during the early 1850s. The published essays show Emerson's interest in many practical aspects of human life, and reflect his increasing involvement in politics--chiefly in the antislavery movement--during the decade before the Civil War. This edition is based on Emerson's holograph manuscripts and published sources, and incorporates Emerson's later corrections and revisions.
Hardcover 2004
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume VII, Society and Solitude
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction and notes by Ronald A. Bosco
Text established by Douglas Emory Wilson
Society and Solitude, published in 1870, was the first collection of essays Emerson had put into press since The Conduct of Life ten years earlier. This edition is based on Emerson's holograph manuscripts and published sources. The text incorporates corrections and revisions he recorded in both sources, and thus restores for the reader the text he actually wrote. Although he is still visibly the insistent optimist of his early and middle career, here Emerson assumes a more pragmatic attitude than formerly toward the life of the mind and the imagination.
Hardcover 2008
Collected Works of Velimir Khlebnikov, Volume I, Letters and Theoretical Writings
Velimir Khlebnikov
Translated by Paul Schmidt
Edited by Charlotte Douglas
Hardcover
Collected Works of Velimir Khlebnikov, Volume II, Prose, Plays, and Supersagas
Velimir Khlebnikov
Translated by Paul Schmidt
Edited by Ronald Vroon
Hardcover 1989
Collected Works of Velimir Khlebnikov, Volume III, Selected Poems
Velimir Khlebnikov
Translated by Paul Schmidt
Edited by Ronald Vroon
Dubbed "a Columbus of new poetic continents" because of his search for a poetics as diverse as the universe itself, Velimir Khlebnikov is the creator of some of the most extraordinary poems in the Russian language. Sometimes surreal, sometimes esoteric, but always dazzlingly innovative, the 192 poems in this volume range broadly from the lyrical to the epic.
Paperback 1998 / Hardcover 1998
Color and Culture
Ross Posnock
Ross Posnock offers a much needed and startlingly new historical perspective on "black intellectuals" as a social category, ranging over a century--from Frederick Douglass to Patricia Williams, from W. E. B. Du Bois to Samuel Delany and Adrienne Kennedy. These writers challenge two durable assumptions: that high culture is "white culture" and that racial uplift is the sole concern of the black intellectual.
Hardcover 1998 / Paperback 2000
Colors of the Mind
Angus Fletcher
Recognizing that the field of formal philosophy is only one demonstration of the uses of thought, Fletcher looks for the ways other languages (and their framing forms) serve the purpose of certain thinking activities. In the end he gives us literature--not the content of thought, but its form, its shape, the fugitive colors taken on by the mind as represented in art.
Hardcover 1991
Comeuppance
William Flesch
With Comeuppance, Flesch delivers the freshest, most generous thinking about the novel since Walter Benjamin wrote on the storyteller and Wayne C. Booth on the rhetoric of fiction. In clear and engaging prose, Flesch integrates evolutionary psychology into literary studies, creating a new theory of fiction in which form and content flawlessly intermesh.
Hardcover 2008 / Paperback 2009
Coming of Age as a Poet
Helen Vendler
To find a personal style is, for a writer, to become adult; and to write one's first "perfect" poem--a poem that wholly and successfully embodies that style--is to come of age as a poet. By looking at the precedents, circumstances, and artistry of the first perfect poems composed by John Milton, John Keats, T. S. Eliot, and Sylvia Plath, Coming of Age as a Poet offers rare insight into this mysterious process, and into the indispensable period of learning and experimentation that precedes such poetic achievement.
Hardcover 2003 / Paperback 2004
Coming to Writing" and Other Essays
Helene Cixous
Edited and translated by Deborah Jenson
Translated by Sarah Cornell
Translated by Ann Liddle
Translated by Susan Sellers
Susan Rubin Suleiman
This collection presents six essays by one of France's most remarkable contemporary authors. A notoriously playful stylist, Cixous here explores how the problematics of the sexes--viewed as a paradigm for all difference, which is the organizing principle behind identity and meaning--manifest themselves, write themselves, in texts.
Hardcover 1991 / Paperback
Communities of Honor and Love in Henry James
Manfred MacKenzie
Hardcover 1975
Comparative Studies in Greek and Indic Meter
Gregory Nagy
View a video of Professor Greg Nagy leading discussion and commentary on one of the greatest epics of all time: The Iliad"

Hardcover 1974
Complete Poems
John Keats
Edited by Jack Stillinger
Here is the first reliable edition of Keats's complete poems designed expressly for general readers and students. Jack Stillinger provides helpful explanatory notes to the poems which give dates of composition, identify quotations and allusions, gloss names and words not included in the ordinary desk dictionary, and refer the reader to the best critical interpretations of the poems. The new introduction provides central facts about Keats's life and career, describes the themes of his best work, and speculates on the causes of his greatness.
Hardcover 1982 / Paperback 1991
A Concordance to Livy
David W. Packard
Hardcover 1968
Concordia Discors
Andrew Scholtz
Writing to a friend, Horace describes him as fascinated by "the discordant harmony of the cosmos, its purpose and power." Scholtz takes this notion of "discordant harmony" and argues for it as an aesthetic principle where classical Athenian literature addresses politics in the idiom of sexual desire. Drawing on theorists of the sociality of language, his approach is an untried one for this kind of topic.
Paperback 2008
Consciousness and the Novel
David Lodge
How does the novel represent consciousness? And how has this changed over time? In a series of interconnected essays, Lodge pursues these questions down various paths. In essays on Charles Dickens, E. M. Forster, Evelyn Waugh, Kingsley and Martin Amis, Henry James, John Updike, and Philip Roth, and in reflections on his own practice as a novelist, Lodge is able to bring to light--and to engaging life--the technical, intellectual, and sometimes simply mysterious working of the creative mind.
Hardcover 2002 / Paperback 2004
The Consent of the Governed
Gillian Brown
What made the United States what it is began long before a shot was fired at a redcoat in Lexington, Massachusetts in 1775. It began quietly in homes and schoolrooms across the colonies in the reading lessons women gave to children. Just as the Protestant revolt originated in a practice of individual reading of the Bible, so the theories of reading developed by John Locke were the means by which a revolutionary attitude toward authority was disseminated throughout the British colonies in North America.
Hardcover 2001
The Consolation of Philosophy
Boethius
Translated by David R. Slavitt
Introduction by Seth Lerer
Composed while its author was imprisoned, this book remains one of Western literature’s most eloquent meditations on the transitory nature of earthly belongings, and the superiority of things of the mind. Slavitt’s translation captures the energy and passion of the original. And in an introduction intended for the general reader, Seth Lerer places Boethius’s life and achievement in context.
Hardcover 2008
Consuming Myth
Stephen Yenser
The Consuming Myth is a discerning account of his work that will well serve amateur and initiate alike. Yenser ranges over all of Merrill's writing to date, from a precocious book printed when its author was fifteen to his most recent publication, a verse play. He writes about both of the poet's novels and pays particular attention to the epic poem The Changing Light at Santkver His close readings shed light on Merrill's boldly and subtly original techniques, his kinship with Mallarmé, Proust, Yeats, Stevens, and others, and the network of connections among his diverse undertakings.
Hardcover
Convention, 1500-1750
Lawrence Manley
Hardcover 1980
The Correspondence of Walter Benjamin and Gershom Scholem, 1932-1940
Gershom Scholem
Translated by Gary Smith
Translated by Andre LeFevere
Anson Rabinbach
Paperback 1992
Costly Monuments
Barbara Leah Harman
Harman begins by surveying the critical tradition on Herbert's work in our century--from George Herbert Palmer to Stanley Fish. In this penetrating assessment Harman explores the relationship between critical practice and belief.
Hardcover 1982
Cotton Mather
David Levin
Hardcover 1978
The Craft of Zeus
John Scheid
Jesper Svenbro
Translated by Carol Volk
In this dazzling commentary on Greek and Roman myth and society, weaving emerges as a metaphor rich with possibility. From rituals symbolizing the cohesion of society to the erotic and marital significance of weaving, this lively book defines the logic of one of the central concepts in Greek and Roman thought.
Hardcover 1996 / Paperback 2001
Crafting a Collection
Anna M. Shields
Compiled in 940 at the court of the kingdom of Shu, the Huajian ji is the earliest extant collection of song lyrics by literati poets. In this book, Anna Shields examines the influence of court culture on the creation of the anthology and the significance of imitation and convention in its lyrics. By illuminating the historical and literary contexts of the anthology, the author aims to situate the Huajian ji within larger questions of Chinese literary history.
Hardcover 2006
The Creation of Nikolai Gogol
Donald Fanger
Nikolai Gogol, Russia's greatest comic writer, is a literary enigma. His masterworks have attracted contradictory labels over the years, even as the originality of his achievement continues to defy exact explanation. Fanger's superb new book begins by considering why this should be so, and goes onto survey what Gogol created, step by step: an extraordinary body of writing, a model for the writer in Russian society, a textual identity that eclipses his scanty biography, and a kind of fiction unique in its time.
Hardcover 1979 / Paperback
The Creative Mind in Coleridge's Poetry
Kathleen M. Wheeler
Hardcover 1982
Critical Aesthetics
James Dorsey
Hardcover 2009
The Culture of Kitharoidia
Timothy Power
The Culture of Kitharoidia is the first study dedicated exclusively to the art, practice, and charismatic persona of the citharode. Traversing a wide range of discourse and imagery about kitharoidia--poetic and prose texts, iconography, inscriptions--the book offers a nuanced account of the aesthetic and sociocultural complexities of citharodic song and examines the iconic role of the songmakers in the popular imagination.
Paperback 2009
The Damnation of Theron Ware
Harold Frederic
Edited by Everett Carter
This Faustian tale of the spiritual disintegration of a young minister, written in the 1890s, deals subtly and powerfully with the impact of science on innocence and the collective despair that marked the transition into the modern age.
Hardcover 1960 / Paperback 1996
Dante
John Freccero
Edited and with an introduction by Rachel Jacoff
Freccero enables us to see the Divine Comedy for the bold, poetic experiment that it is. Too many critics have domesticated Dante by separating his theology from his poetics. Freccero argues that to fail to see the convergence of the letter and the spirit, the pilgrim and the poet, is to fail to understand Dante's poetics of conversion.
Hardcover 1986 / Paperback
Daphnis and Chloe. Anthia and Habrocomes
Longus
Xenophon of Ephesus
Edited and translated by Jeffrey Henderson
Hardcover 2009
Darwin and the Novelists
George Levine
Darwin’s theory thrust human life into time and nature and subjected it to naturalistic rather than spiritual or moral analysis. Insisting on gradual and regular–lawful–change, Darwinian thought nevertheless requires acknowledgment of chance and randomness for a full explanation of biological phenomena. George Levine shows how these conceptions affected nineteenth–century novelists—from Dickens and Trollope to Conrad—and draws illuminating contrasts with the pre–Darwinian novel and the perspective of natural theology.
Hardcover 1988
Death Sentences
Garrett Stewart
Hardcover 1984
Death in Quotation Marks
Svetlana Boym
Hardcover 1991
The Death of Socrates
Emily Wilson
Socrates's death in 399 BCE has figured largely in our world ever since, shaping how we think about heroism and celebrity, religion and family life, state control and individual freedom, the distance of intellectual life from daily activity--many of the key coordinates of Western culture. In this book, Wilson analyzes the enormous and enduring power the trial and death of Socrates has exerted over the Western imagination.
Hardcover 2007
The Decline and Fall of the Lettered City
Jean Franco
The cultural Cold War in Latin America was waged as a war of values--artistic freedom versus communitarianism, Western values versus national cultures, the autonomy of art versus a commitment to liberation struggles--and at a time when the prestige of literature had never been higher. The projects of the historic avant-garde were revitalized by an anti-capitalist ethos and envisaged as the opposite of the republican state. The Decline and Fall of the Lettered City charts the conflicting universals of this period, the clash between avant-garde and political vanguard. This was also a twilight of literature at the threshold of the great cultural revolution of the seventies and eighties, a revolution to which the Cold War indirectly contributed. In the eighties, civil war and military rule, together with the rapid development of mass culture and communication empires, changed the political and cultural map.
Paperback 2002 / Hardcover 2002
Deliberate Speed
W. T. Lhamon
By surveying the artistic terrain of the period--examining works by figures as varied as Miles Davis, Ralph Ellison, Robert Frank, Allen Ginsberg, Little Richard, Charlie Parker, Jackson Pollock, Thomas Pynchon, and Ludwig Wittgenstein--Lhamon demonstrates how many of the distinctive elements that so many attribute to the revolutionary period of the 1960s had their roots in the fertile soil of the 1950s.
Paperback 2002
Delirious Milton
Gordon Teskey
The argument of Delirious Milton is that Milton's creative power is drawn from a rift at the center of his consciousness over the question of creation itself. This rift forces the poet to oscillate deliriously between two incompatible perspectives, at once affirming and denying the presence of spirit in what he creates. From one perspective, the act of creation is centered in God and the purpose of art is to imitate and praise the Creator. From the other perspective, the act of creation is centered in the human, in the built environment of the modern world.
Hardcover 2006
Democracy and Poetry
Robert Penn Warren
In these two essays, one of America’s most honored writers fastens on the interrelation of American democracy and poetry and the concept of selfhood vital to each. “I really don’t want to make a noise like a pundit,” Mr. Warren declares, “What I do want to do is to return us—and myself most of all—to a scrutiny of our own experience of our own world.” Indeed, Democracy and Poetry offers one of the most pertinent and strongly personal meditations on our condition to have appeared in recent letters.
Hardcover 1975 / Paperback
Derrida
Christopher Norris
Norris demonstrates that Derrida's texts should be understood as belonging more to philosophy than to literature. He explains the significance of Derrida's writing on texts in the Western philosophical tradition, from Plato to Kant, liegel, and tiusserl, placing him squarely within that tradition. He also discusses some of the reasons for the massive institutional resistance that has so far prevented philosophers from engaging seriously with Derrida's work.
Paperback
Desiring Donne
Ben Saunders
Desiring Donne explores the dialectic of desire, re-evaluating both Donne's poetry and the complex responses it has inspired, from his earliest readers to his recent professional critics. Witty, erudite, theoretically engaged, but intensely readable, this study takes into account recent developments in the fields of historicism, feminism, queer theory, and postmodern psychoanalysis, while offering dazzling close readings of many of Donne's most famous poems.
Hardcover 2007
The Development of Greek Biography, Expanded Ed
Arnaldo Momigliano
Paperback
The Dhvanyaloka of Anandavardhana with the Locana of Abhinavagupta
Edited and translated by Daniel H. H. Ingalls
Translated by Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson
Translated by M. V. Patwardhan
Hardcover 1990
The Dialects of Ancient Gaul
Joshua Whatmough
Hardcover 1970
Dionysos at Large
Marcel Detienne
Translated by Arthur Goldhammer
Hardcover
Discourses of Seduction
Hosea Hirata
If the postmodernist ethical onslaught has led to the demise of literature by exposing its political agenda, if all literature is compromised by its entanglement with power, why does literature's subterranean voice still seduce us into reading? And what is the relationship between ethics and history in the study of literature? In a series of essays on the writings of Kawabata Yasunari, Murakami Haruki, Karatani Kjin, Furui Yoshikichi, Mishima Yukio, Oe Kenzaburo, Natsume Soseki, and Kobayashi Hideo, Hosea Hirata visits the primal force of the scandalous to confront the questions raised.
Hardcover 2005
Disseminating Whitman
Michael Moon
Hardcover 1991 / Paperback
Divagations
Stéphane Mallarmé
Translated by Barbara Johnson
The salmagundi of prose poems, prose-poetic musings, criticism, and reflections that is Divagations has long been considered a treasure trove by students of aesthetics and modern poetry. This was the only book of prose that Mallarmé published in his lifetime and, in a new translation by Johnson, it is now available for the first time in English just as he arranged it, in all of its languor and musicality.
Hardcover 2007 / Paperback 2009
Dostoevsky and The Idiot
Robin Feuer Miller
Hardcover 1981
Doubling the Point
J. M. Coetzee
Edited by David Attwell
Hardcover 1992 / Paperback
The Dramatic Craftsmanship of Moreto
Frank P. Casa
Hardcover 1966
Dreaming Across Boundaries
Edited by Louise Marlow
This volume explores the context of theological speculations and political aspirations through the medium of dreams to present fascinating insights into the social history of the pre-modern Islamic world in all its cultural diversity. Wider cultural exchanges are discussed through concrete examples such as the Arabic version of the Aristotelian treatise De divinatione per somnum, and some of the current scholarly assumptions about dreams are challenged by personal reports that express individual personalities, self-awareness, and spiritual development.
Hardcover 2008 / Paperback 2008
Dreaming Across Boundaries
Edited by Louise Marlow
This volume explores the context of theological speculations and political aspirations through the medium of dreams to present fascinating insights into the social history of the pre-modern Islamic world in all its cultural diversity. Wider cultural exchanges are discussed through concrete examples such as the Arabic version of the Aristotelian treatise De divinatione per somnum, and some of the current scholarly assumptions about dreams are challenged by personal reports that express individual personalities, self-awareness, and spiritual development.
Hardcover 2008 / Paperback 2008
Dreaming and Experience in Classical Antiquity
William V. Harris
Hardcover 2009
Drumbeats, Masks, and Metaphor
Genevieve Fabre

Contemporary Afro–American theatre is an exciting spectacle of an emerging black identity during a period when blacks have come to the forefront of political activity in the United States. Geneviève Fabre brings us the vast and rich production of black drama since 1945, placing it in historical and cultural context as a platform for political statement. Two strains emerge: the militant theatre of protest, and the ethnic theatre of black experience.

Hardcover 1983
Dynastic Crisis and Cultural Innovation
Edited by David Der-wei Wang
Edited by Wei Shang
Focusing on the twin themes of crisis and innovation, the seventeen chapters in this book aim to illuminate the late Ming and late Qing as eras of literary-cultural innovation during periods of imperial disintegration; to analyze linkages between the two periods and the radical heritage they bequeathed to the modern imagination; and to rethink the "premodernity" of the late Ming and late Qing in the context of the end of the age of modernism.
Hardcover 2006
Early American Proverbs and Proverbial Phrases
Bartlett Jere Whiting
Hardcover 1978
Early Auden
Edward Mendelson
Paperback 1983
The Early Lectures of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume I, 1833-1836
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Stephen E. Whicher
Edited by Robert E. Spiller
Hardcover 1959
The Early Lectures of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume II, 1836-1838
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Stephen E. Whicher
Edited by Robert E. Spiller
Edited by Wallace E. Williams
Hardcover 1964
The Early Lectures of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume III, 1838-1842
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Robert E. Spiller
Edited by Wallace E. Williams
Hardcover 1972
Ecology without Nature
Timothy Morton
Morton argues that the chief stumbling block to environmental thinking is the image of nature that most writers promote: they propose a new world view