By joneilortiz on September 21, 2009
Roger Rees (ed.), Ted Hughes and the Classics. Classical Presences. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press, 2009. Pp. xii, 348. ISBN 978-0-19-922971-0. $135.00. From Simon Goldhill’s review in the Bryn Mawr Classical Review: There are at least three types of reception study in classics. The first takes a work of the ancient world — the Aeneid, [...]
Posted in Literature, Noted | Tagged classics, Literature |
By joneilortiz on June 8, 2009
My last post on the Biblical and philosophical concept of “kenosis” ended with a reference to Emmanuel Levinas, whose essay, “Judaism and Kenosis,” though unread at the time seemed to promise an altogether different approach that that found in contemporary and poststructuralist philosophies, which remain in large part derived from the Christian tradition. From Luther to Hegel [...]
Posted in Literature, Philosophy | Tagged Literature, Philosophy, religion |
By David Hahn on April 28, 2009
Might the jingle be a very old thing, pre-dating radio and television? Here is Bakhtin trying to explain the type of orality featured in Rabelais through the medieval and early modern cris, or street cries: “The cris were loud advertisements called out by the Paris street vendors, and composed according to a certain versified form; [...]
Posted in Advertising, Literature | Tagged Advertising, Literature, Philosophy |
By David Hahn on March 24, 2009
Colin Burrow’s review of the most recent English version of Giovanni Boccaccio’s Decameron (The London Review of Books: 12 March 2009) is less an evaluation of the merits of J.G. Nichols’s translation than an occasion to reopen some pertinent questions regarding the psychological dimension of literary narrative. Though the Decameron’s own generic heritage is mixed–its [...]
Posted in Literature | Tagged Literature, psychology |
By joneilortiz on November 30, 2008
Towards the end of his epic history of the concept of “milieu”, Leo Spitzer briefly goes over the origin of the closely-related English word, “environment” – which was coined, it turns out, by Thomas Carlyle in an article on Goethe, published in Miscellanies (1827). And “what is particularly interesting is the fact that the lines [...]
Posted in Film, Literature | Tagged environment, Film, Literature, milieu, Philosophy |