الفهرس الالي للمكتبة المركزية بجامعة عبد الحميد بن باديس - مستغانم
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The decline and fall of the lettered city / Jean Franco
Titre : The decline and fall of the lettered city : Latin America in the Cold War / Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Jean Franco (1944-....) Editeur : Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press Année de publication : 2002 Importance : viii, 341 p. Format : 25 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 0-674-00752-2 Index. décimale : 860.9 Résumé : The decline and fall of the lettered city : Latin America in the Cold War / [texte imprimé] / Jean Franco (1944-....) . - Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 2002 . - viii, 341 p. ; 25 cm.
ISBN : 0-674-00752-2
Index. décimale : 860.9 Résumé : Exemplaires
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité aucun exemplaire The feminist difference / Barbara Johnson
Titre : The feminist difference : literature, psychoanalysis, race, and gender / Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Barbara Johnson Editeur : Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press Année de publication : 1998 Importance : viii, 215 p. Format : 22 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-0-674-29881-1 Index. décimale : 809/. Résumé : Embattled and belittled, demonized and deemed passe, this text argues that feminism in the late 1990s seems becalmed without being calm. It is as true in literary criticism as elsewhere in the culture - yet it is in literary criticism that these essays locate renewed promises, possibilities, and applications of feminist thought. In readings from an array of texts - legal, literary, cinematic, philosophical and psychonalytical - literary theorist Barbara Johnson demonstrates that the conflicts and uncertainties that beset feminism are signs not of a dead end, but of a creative turning-point. She argues that literature is essential for feminism because it is the place where impasses can be kept and opened for examination, where questions can be guarded and not forced into a premature validation of the available paradigms. In her book the literature does not appear as a predetermined set of works but as a mode of cultural work, the work of making readable those impossible and necessary things that cannot yet be spoken. The feminist difference : literature, psychoanalysis, race, and gender / [texte imprimé] / Barbara Johnson . - Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1998 . - viii, 215 p. ; 22 cm.
ISBN : 978-0-674-29881-1
Index. décimale : 809/. Résumé : Embattled and belittled, demonized and deemed passe, this text argues that feminism in the late 1990s seems becalmed without being calm. It is as true in literary criticism as elsewhere in the culture - yet it is in literary criticism that these essays locate renewed promises, possibilities, and applications of feminist thought. In readings from an array of texts - legal, literary, cinematic, philosophical and psychonalytical - literary theorist Barbara Johnson demonstrates that the conflicts and uncertainties that beset feminism are signs not of a dead end, but of a creative turning-point. She argues that literature is essential for feminism because it is the place where impasses can be kept and opened for examination, where questions can be guarded and not forced into a premature validation of the available paradigms. In her book the literature does not appear as a predetermined set of works but as a mode of cultural work, the work of making readable those impossible and necessary things that cannot yet be spoken. Réservation
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Exemplaires (2)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 020413 820-115.2 Ouvrage Bibliothèque Centrale 800 - Littérature (Belles-Lettres) et techniques d’écriture Disponible 020414 820-115.3 Ouvrage Bibliothèque Centrale 800 - Littérature (Belles-Lettres) et techniques d’écriture Disponible The feminist difference / Barbara Johnson
Titre : The feminist difference : literature, psychoanalysis, race, and gender / Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Barbara Johnson Editeur : Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press Année de publication : 1998 Importance : viii, 215 p. Format : 22 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-0-674-00191-6 Langues : Anglais (eng) Index. décimale : 809/. Résumé : Embattled and belittled, demonized and deemed passé, feminism today seems becalmed without being calm. This is as true in literary criticism as elsewhere in the culture--yet it is in literary criticism that these essays locate the renewed promises, possibilities, and applications of feminist thought. In fresh readings of a wide array of texts--legal, literary, cinematic, philosophical, and psychoanalytical--renowned literary theorist Barbara Johnson demonstrates that the conflicts and uncertainties that beset feminism are signs not of a dead end, but of a creative turning-point.
Employing surprising juxtapositions, The Feminist Difference looks at fiction by black writers from a feminist/psychoanalytic perspective; at poetry from Phillis Wheatley to Baudelaire and Marceline Desbordes-Valmore; and at feminism and law, particularly in the work of Patricia Williams and the late Mary Joe Frug. Toni Morrison and Sigmund Freud, John Keats and Jane Campion, Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Nathaniel Hawthorne, Nella Larson and Heinz Kohut are among the many occasions for Johnson's rich, stimulating, unfailingly close reading of moments at which feminism seems to founder in its own contradictions--moments that re-emerge here as sources of a revitalized critical awareness.
In the final analysis, Johnson argues, literature is essential for feminism because it is the place where impasses can be kept and opened for examination, where questions can be guarded and not forced into a premature validation of the available paradigms. In her book literature appears not as a predetermined set of works but as a mode of cultural work, the work of making readable those impossible and necessary things that cannot yet be spoken.The feminist difference : literature, psychoanalysis, race, and gender / [texte imprimé] / Barbara Johnson . - Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1998 . - viii, 215 p. ; 22 cm.
ISBN : 978-0-674-00191-6
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Index. décimale : 809/. Résumé : Embattled and belittled, demonized and deemed passé, feminism today seems becalmed without being calm. This is as true in literary criticism as elsewhere in the culture--yet it is in literary criticism that these essays locate the renewed promises, possibilities, and applications of feminist thought. In fresh readings of a wide array of texts--legal, literary, cinematic, philosophical, and psychoanalytical--renowned literary theorist Barbara Johnson demonstrates that the conflicts and uncertainties that beset feminism are signs not of a dead end, but of a creative turning-point.
Employing surprising juxtapositions, The Feminist Difference looks at fiction by black writers from a feminist/psychoanalytic perspective; at poetry from Phillis Wheatley to Baudelaire and Marceline Desbordes-Valmore; and at feminism and law, particularly in the work of Patricia Williams and the late Mary Joe Frug. Toni Morrison and Sigmund Freud, John Keats and Jane Campion, Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Nathaniel Hawthorne, Nella Larson and Heinz Kohut are among the many occasions for Johnson's rich, stimulating, unfailingly close reading of moments at which feminism seems to founder in its own contradictions--moments that re-emerge here as sources of a revitalized critical awareness.
In the final analysis, Johnson argues, literature is essential for feminism because it is the place where impasses can be kept and opened for examination, where questions can be guarded and not forced into a premature validation of the available paradigms. In her book literature appears not as a predetermined set of works but as a mode of cultural work, the work of making readable those impossible and necessary things that cannot yet be spoken.Réservation
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité C1-004095 820-115.1 Ouvrage Bibliothèque Centrale 800 - Littérature (Belles-Lettres) et techniques d’écriture Disponible the language of war / James Dawes
Titre : the language of war : literature and culture in the US from the Civil War through World War II Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : James Dawes (1969-....), Auteur Editeur : Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press Année de publication : 2005 Importance : 1 vol. (308 p.) Format : 23 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-0-674-01594-4 Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : counting on the battlefield,care and creation,freedom,luck,and catastrophe,language,violence,and bureaucracy Index. décimale : 810.9 Résumé : "The Language of War" examines the relationship between language and violence, focusing on American literature from the Civil War, World War I, and World War II. James Dawes proceeds by developing two primary questions: How does the strategic violence of war affect literary, legal, and philosophical representations? And, in turn, how do such representations affect the reception and initiation of violence itself? Authors and texts of central importance in this study range from Louisa May Alcott and William James to William Faulkner, the Geneva Conventions, and contemporary American organizational sociology and language theory. The consensus approach in literary studies since the 1980s has been to treat language as an extension of violence. The idea that there might be an inverse relation between language and violence, says Dawes, has all too rarely influenced the dominant voices in literary studies today. the language of war : literature and culture in the US from the Civil War through World War II [texte imprimé] / James Dawes (1969-....), Auteur . - Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 2005 . - 1 vol. (308 p.) ; 23 cm.
ISBN : 978-0-674-01594-4
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Mots-clés : counting on the battlefield,care and creation,freedom,luck,and catastrophe,language,violence,and bureaucracy Index. décimale : 810.9 Résumé : "The Language of War" examines the relationship between language and violence, focusing on American literature from the Civil War, World War I, and World War II. James Dawes proceeds by developing two primary questions: How does the strategic violence of war affect literary, legal, and philosophical representations? And, in turn, how do such representations affect the reception and initiation of violence itself? Authors and texts of central importance in this study range from Louisa May Alcott and William James to William Faulkner, the Geneva Conventions, and contemporary American organizational sociology and language theory. The consensus approach in literary studies since the 1980s has been to treat language as an extension of violence. The idea that there might be an inverse relation between language and violence, says Dawes, has all too rarely influenced the dominant voices in literary studies today. Réservation
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Exemplaires (5)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité C1-004090 820-110.1 Ouvrage Bibliothèque Centrale 800 - Littérature (Belles-Lettres) et techniques d’écriture Disponible 020401 820-110.2 Ouvrage Bibliothèque Centrale 800 - Littérature (Belles-Lettres) et techniques d’écriture Disponible 020402 820-110.3 Ouvrage Bibliothèque Centrale 800 - Littérature (Belles-Lettres) et techniques d’écriture Disponible 020403 820-110.4 Ouvrage Bibliothèque Centrale 800 - Littérature (Belles-Lettres) et techniques d’écriture Disponible 020404 820-110.5 Ouvrage Bibliothèque Centrale 800 - Littérature (Belles-Lettres) et techniques d’écriture Disponible