Humanities Hero Image
Humanities
Green Age Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 72
ISBN: 9780822954217
Pub Date: 25 Aug 1989
Description:
Alicia Suskin Ostriker is that rare combination, a writer equally admired as poet and critic. The variety of subjects in Green Age is characteristic of her writing: from the opening poem, "Fifty," funny, courageous, and defiant, to a set of birthday poems for a grown daughter; from emulations of the Persian mystic Rumi, to the provactive "Meditation in Seven Days," whose central assumption is that we may find in the Bible traces of a Canaanite goddess whose worship was forbidden with the advent of patriarchal monotheism. But if her subjects may seem formidable, her poems are not.
Desert Tracings Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 87
ISBN: 9780819511584
Pub Date: 01 May 1989
Illustrations: Frontis.
Description:
According to legend, the Bedouin tribes of pre-Islamic Arabia held poetry competitions during annual fairs near Mecca. The wining poems called Mu'allaqát, or Hanging Odes, were embroidered in gold on banners and suspended from the walls of Arabia's most sacred shrine, Ka'ba. Desert Tracings is a translation of six classical sixth to eighth century odes.
Six O'Clock Mine Report Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 64
ISBN: 9780822954156
Pub Date: 15 Apr 1989
Description:
The speaker in Irene McKinney’s poems is most often alone, sitting at the side of a stream, or standing at her own chosen gravesite in the Appalachian mountains, and the meditations spoken out of this essential solitude are powerfully clear, witty, and wide-ranging in content and tone. The center sequence of poems in the Emily Dickinson persona explores and magnifies that great and enigmatic figure. The poems are firmly grounded in concern for the ways in which the elemental powers are at work in the earth and in us: on the surface of our lives, and deeper in the underworld of the coalmines.
Mark of the Beast Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 184
ISBN: 9780813116808
Pub Date: 23 Jan 1989
Description:
The First World War is a watershed in the intellectual and spiritual history of the modern world. On the one hand, it brought an end to a sense of optimism and decency bred by the prosperity of nineteenth-century Europe. On the other, it brought forth a sense of futility and alienation that has since pervaded European thought.
Ethics of Coercion and Authority Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 232
ISBN: 9780822985082
Pub Date: 15 Jan 1989
Description:
“The work would be of great value to philosophers engaged in the conceptual analysis of coercion, to political scientists studying the state or other coercive institutions, and to advanced readers interested in the field of peace research.”—Choice
American Women Writing Fiction Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 248
ISBN: 9780813101828
Pub Date: 30 Dec 1988
Illustrations: illus
Description:
American literature is no longer the refuge of the solitary hero. Like the society it mirrors, it is now a far richer, many-faceted explication of a complicated and diverse society -- racially, culturally, and ethnically interwoven and at the same time fractured and fractious.Ten women writing fiction in America today -- Toni Cade Bambara, Joan Didion, Louise Erdrich, Gail Godwin, Mary Gordon, Alison Lurie, Joyce Carol Oates, Jayne Anne Phillips, Susan Fromberg Schaeffer, and Mary Lee Settle -- represent that geographic, ethnic, and racial diversity that is distinctively American.
Woman Of The River Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 112
ISBN: 9780822954095
Pub Date: 15 Dec 1988
Description:
In Woman of the River one of the major voices in Latin American poetry confronts the political realities of contemporary Central America. Many of the poems are political, direct, and condemnatory of the United States’ presence in Latin America, and they are rich, human documents rooted in Alegria’s knowledge of and love for her subjects. As Carolyn Forche has written of Alegria’s previous selection of poems, Flowers from the Volcano: “These poems are testimonies to the value of a single human memory, political in the sense that there is no life apart from our common destiny.

Niobe Poems, The

Format: Paperback
Pages: 80
ISBN: 9780822954118
Pub Date: 04 Nov 1988
Description:
Kate Daniels’s central myth is that of Niobe, the mother in Greek mythology whose children were killed by the gods because of her great pride in them. She taps the lasting power of the ancient story in poems about personal loss and political insanity. Though the subjects are frequently grim, the final effect of the book is not, since Daniels’s central theme is endurance, the discovery of what we need to survive.
Beckett's Critical Complicity Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 240
ISBN: 9780813116648
Pub Date: 14 Oct 1988
Description:
Samuel Beckett's work harbors an inevitable complicity with traditional modes and values. His idealist and even nihilist inclinations, for example, are closely related to the abstracting and systematizing tendencies that have predominated in Western thinking. His drama and fiction, in reproducing these tendencies, also help to reinforce and legitimate them.
Against the Meanwhile Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 79
ISBN: 9780819511515
Pub Date: 05 Oct 1988
Description:
Mark Irwin's boyhood near the nuclear laboratory in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, haunts his poetry. This book of three elegies explores the nature of remembered time and space-personal, historical, geological-against the progression of time-evolution, germination, cell division, nuclear fission, the decay of memory and feeling. This, the poet says, is a kind of "fossil record" of science's impact on the modern world.
Robert Frost and the New England Renaissance Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 192
ISBN: 9780813116495
Pub Date: 27 Sep 1988
Description:
"A poem is best read in the light of all the other poems ever written." So said Robert Frost in instructing readers on how to achieve poetic literacy. George Monteiro's newest book follows that dictum to enhance our understanding of Frost's most valuable poems by demonstrating the ways in which they circulate among the constellations of great poems and essays of the New England Renaissance.
Here on Earth Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 64
ISBN: 9780819511560
Pub Date: 01 Sep 1988
Description:
A collection of poetry from an award-winning poet, playwright and novelist.

The Enduring Hills

Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
ISBN: 9780813101859
Pub Date: 09 Aug 1988
Description:
Originally published in 1950, The Enduring Hills was Janice Holt Giles's first novel. It is based in part on her own courtship and introduction to the Kentucky mountain country. Here, Giles introduces Hod and Mary Pierce and begins her Appalachian trilogy.
South from Hell-fer-Sartin Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 296
ISBN: 9780813101750
Pub Date: 04 Aug 1988
Description:
South from Hell-fer-Sartin, a short creek flowing into the Middle Fork of the Kentucky River, lies one of the of the most isolated regions in Kentucky. There, on the north slope of the Pine Mountain range in Leslie and Perry counties -- probably the last stronghold of white, English-language folk tales in North America -- Leonard W. Roberts recorded this rich collection more than three decades ago.
Gwendolyn Brooks Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 280
ISBN: 9780813101804
Pub Date: 21 Jun 1988
Illustrations: illus
Description:
Gwendolyn Brooks is one of the major American poets of this century and the first black woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for poetry (1950). Yet far less critical attention has focused on her work than on that of her peers.In this comprehensive biocritical study, Melhem -- herself a poet and critic -- traces the development of Brooks's poetry over four decades, from such early works as A Street in Bronzeville, Annie Allen, and The Bean Eaters, to the more recent In the Mecca, Riot, and To Disembark.
The Last American Puritan Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 456
ISBN: 9780819562388
Pub Date: 01 Apr 1988
Illustrations: 65 illus. 8 maps.
Description:
Powerful preacher, political negotiator for New England in the halls of Parliament, president of Harvard, father of Cotton Mather, Increase Mather was the epitome of the American Puritan. He was the most important spokesman of his generation for Congregationalism and became the last American Puritan of consequence as the seventeenth century ended. The story begins in 1639 when Mather was born in the Massachusetts village of Dorchester.