CALLIMACHUS AND HIS CRITICS - signiertes Exemplar
2022, ISBN: 9780691043678
Taschenbuch, Gebundene Ausgabe, Erstausgabe
Melbourne : Macmillan, 2003. Octavo, boards in dustjacket, pp. 287, 30 unnumbered leaves of plates, a fine copy, as new. Anne Marsh's treatise on the art of photography traces its theore… Mehr…
Melbourne : Macmillan, 2003. Octavo, boards in dustjacket, pp. 287, 30 unnumbered leaves of plates, a fine copy, as new. Anne Marsh's treatise on the art of photography traces its theoretical underpinning from the early debates between the rationalists and the fantasists, through psychoanalytical interpretations, to the theatre of desire. She investigates the role of photography in ghostly performances', the masking of desire' and high camp aesthetics' - through to performance art' and the role of the photographer as a gender terrorist' - as in the work of Del LaGrace Volcano. The study concludes with notable examples of postmodern photography as they have occurred in the Australian context. This ground-breaking work by a leading Monash University academic will interest all students of photography and followers of recent trends in art and art theory. Includes reproductions of works by Leah King-Smith, Gordon Bennett, Tracey Moffatt, Linda Sproul, Pat Brassington, Jill Orr, Mike Parr, Polixeni Papapetrou, Joel Peter Witkin, Man Ray, Hans Bellmer, Julia Margaret Cameron, J. W. Lindt et al., 0, Liverpool: Walker Art Gallery Liverpool, , 1973. Legatura con punto metallico (stapled binding). Molto buono (Very Good). Catalogo di mostra, Liverpool, Walker Art Gallery Liverpool 27 luglio - 28 ottobre 1973. Gli artisti: Philip Vaughan, Phillip King, Mark Boyle, Stuart Brisley, Ken Kiff, Alan Davie, Hubert Dalwood, Paul Huxley, Carl Plackman, Welfare State, Shirley Cameron and Roland Miller, ed altri. Tavole in nero. 4to. pp. 52 + pubblicità . Molto buono (Very Good). ., Walker Art Gallery Liverpool, 1973, 2.5, Liverpool, England: Walker Art Gallery, 1973. Softbound. VG-, small marks on wraps, library stamp on front , light edge wear. White wraps, 75pp, profuse BW illustrations. Exhibition catalog; artists included are Philip Vaughan, Phillip King, Mark Boyle, Stuart Brisley, Ken Kiff, Alan Davie, Hubert Dalwood, Paul Huxley, Carl Plackman, Welfare State, Shirley Cameron and Roland Miller, Natural Theatre, and Great Georges., Walker Art Gallery, 1973, 3, Hamden, Conn: Archon Books, 1994. Reprint edition. Hardcover. Near fine in near fine jacket In archival mylar sleeve; jacket spine mildly sunned./Near Fine. Quarto in dark grey-brown pictorial jacket; xiv, 929 pages: illustrations ; 24 cm; bibliographical references (pages 647-892) and index. Weighs 3 lbs 3 oz before packing. Continues: Both Sides of the Ocean. "This Second Volume of the life of Henry Adams tells a rounded story of a man, a marriage, the epic history he wrote, and the covert role he played in the politics of late nineteenth-century America. Based on new evidence - unpublished, unrecognized, or misinterpreted letters and writings of Adams, and information from people who knew him personally - it gives a startlingly different picture and an unexpectedly new experience of Adams's life. This book, a continuation of volume one, Both Sides of the Ocean: A Biography of Henry Adams, His First Life, 1838-1862, follows Henry into his matured years - first as a Harvard professor, later as a writer and behind-the-scenes Washington power. With his marriage to Marian (Clover) Hooper in 1872, his story becomes the biography of a remarkable union, shattered by Clover's suicide in 1885. Mr. Chalfant documents a respectful and tender partnership that strengthened Adams and enabled him to continue his work in spite of the devastation of his wife's death. This is also a book about Adams's History of the United States: its conception and growth; how it came to be published; what it says that is important and new; and how it consciously draws on earlier epics - Homer's Iliad and Milton's Paradise Lost - in creating an American mythology. Mr. Chalfant is also the first to disclose and delve into Henry Adams's secret actions as diplomat, politician, interceder in presidential elections (from 1868 to 1884), discoverer of the full nature of the gold conspiracy of 1869 with its attendant impeachable offenses and murder, and successful opponent of a putative Blaine administration. The extraordinary scope of this book takes in a whole world - not only of national politics and diplomacy, but also finance, invention, literature, history, science, art, architecture, travel, and exploration. New perspectives on Napoleon, Albert Gallatin, J.Q. Adams, Karl Marx, Jay Gould, Ulysses and Julia Grant, Congressman Garfield, architect H.H. Richardson, as well as Henry's friends John Hay, Clarence King, and Elizabeth Cameron, among others, filter through the rich fabric of Adams's life and times."- Publisher. Historiens -- États-Unis -- Biographies. Historians. Adams, Henry, 1838-1918., Archon Books, 1994, 4, Bruny Island Environment Network , 2014. 1st Edition . Laminated Boards. Fine/No Jacket as Issued. 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall. Fine Pp 137 Index , Illustrated Throughout, Bruny Island Environment Network, 2014, 5, Interview Magazine-A.W.E, 1989. Paperback. Very Good. Prompt shipment, with tracking. we ship in CLEAN SECURE NEW boxes Very Good Copy, Articles include; Elvis Costello emerges after a three-year hiatus; Offbeat author Lindsley Cameron; Let's Get lost, Bruce Weber's film tribute to Chet Baker; Maggie Jakobson, star of New Year's Day; Harper's Editor Lewis Lapham tries TV with his show, Bookmark; Paul Belvoir, silver designer; Novelist Steve Erickson; Ofra Haza, "bazaar" music-maker; Rooftops, Robert Wise's new film musical; Photography dealer Daniel Wolf assembles his first museum show; In February; Serpent Time: What EVer Happened to...; Sound Advice; In View. By Patrick McMullan; Factory Days; on the eve of MoMA's retrospective of the King of Pop, Paul Morrissey and Brigid Berlin remember the Behind-the-scenes life of Andy Warhol; Headly to Toe: John Guare reports on Glenne Headly's pending stardom; Low Tech, High STyle: Steven Holl moves into the architectural fast lane. By Martin filler; Dynasty's Daughter: A look at the forces that brought Benazir Bhutto to power by Tariq Ali; On Woods' Edge: Mavierick actor James Woods talks to Kenneth Turan on location in Canada; Life Without Lennon: Yoko Ono reminisces on the '60's avant-garde and the famous and not-so-famous by Kevin Sessums; Thoroughly Modern Merce: Merce Cunningham brings his inimitable company to New York's City Center this month by Alastair Macaulay; Bracco's Brass: Lorraine Bracco is adding a high polish to her new roles by Robert Walsh; Out of Berlin: Peter STein, West Germany's leading director, brings his Falstaff to BAM by Michael Billington; Clothes From the Casbah: Some spring things designed by Rifat Ozbek, Fashion's Turkish delight. Photographs by Pamela Hanson; The Sage of New Rochelle: E.L. Doctorow discusses the craft of fiction and his latest novel by Jason Epstein; Shelf Life by Christopher Hitchens; Unreal Estate. By William Stadiem; The Rehabillitation of Robert McNamara by Robert Scheer; French Fax by Christina de Liagre; Bedroom Lies by luc Sante; Natasha Fraser rubbed shoulders with collectors at the auctions, starsat a carnegie Hall Tribute and the mystical at St. John the Divine; Pages are clean, Folio, 130 pages, Interview Magazine-A.W.E, 1989, 3, USA: Stanley Publications, 1959. ALL MAN Adventure Magazine Volume 1, #4; (September/1959; Stanley Publications;) 100 pages including covers; Writers: Jim Sacksby; Lou Cameron; Frank Prinz; Fred P. Dollenberg; George F. Fahenstock; John Wallace; Eric Thane; Andrew P. Loman; Jim Halloran; John Wellesley; Pete Devereux; Richard Damon; Dean W. Ballenger; Jack Bernard; B. W. Von Block; Paul Brock; Rudolfo Sergura; Interior Artists: Hugh Hirtle; Paul Gorenson; A. Micarelli; Frank Liljegren; Clarence Doore; V Prezio, McCartney (aka BILL WARD); Contents; ** "Casting Couch on the Deep Six" (adventure) by Jim Sacksby, art by Hugh Hirtle. Never try to double-cross a girl with a gun.; ** "Say 'No' to Laurie Lee' . and Wish You Were Dead (adventure) by Lou Cameron, art by Paul Gorenson. On the street of a ghost town he fought a duel of wits.; ** "It only Hurts When I Laugh" by Anonymous as told to Frank Prinz, art by A. Micarelli. I felt great, like I was King of the world. I twisted even harder and thoughts: 'I'm King and she's gonna be my Queen!'; ** "The Big Fat Flame" as told to Harry Mayer by Colonel Fred P. Dollenberg.; ** "The $100 Ears" (adventure) by George F. Fahenstock. The day they put a bounty on the Japanese.; ** "The Silvertip Terror" (adventure) by John Wallace as told to Eric Thane, art by Frank Liljegren. Never try to figure how a grizzly's gonna act.; ** "' . Let Me Live'" (adventure) by Andrew P. Loman, art by Clarence Doore. A woman will do anything in order to survive.; ** "Wanton Wench of Bloodstone Island" (adventure) by Jim Halloran, art by V. Prezio.; ** "Slaughter in the Longhouse" (adventure) by John Wellesley as told to Pete Devereux. Somewhere in the bloodstained delta they held my bride.; ** "Horror Cults Around You" (expose) by Richard Damon. The Satanists are searching for new, young recruits.; ** "A Snowflake Fell . and Then We Died" (Novelette) by Dean W. Ballenger. There was only one chance for life. start digging.; ** "Danger: Open Drawbridge Ahead" (features) by Jack Bernard. A day in railroading that could have been prevented.; ** "Conspiracy Against the American Male" (feature) by B.W. Von Block. He's the patsy for the wildest con-game in history.; ** "The Bloodiest 'Madame'" (feature) by Paul Brock. No woman was ever more hungry for the taste for human flesh.; ** "Javelina: Big Game for the Small Hunter" (sports) by Rudolfo Segura. Looking for thrills? Try the south Texas killer hog.; ** "Tout Sweet" Cheesecake photo layout of Jacque Pruner from France (5 pages); *** Book Order # ADV103-2 Condition= Cover creasing; date stamp to front cover; shelf wear;. TRUE FIRST Edition MAGAZINE Format Thus.. Soft Cover. Very Good. Illus. by Interior Artists: Hugh Hirtle; Paul Gorenson; A. Micarelli; Frank Liljegren; Clarence Doore; V Prezio, McCartney (aka BILL WARD);. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Magazine.., Stanley Publications, 1959, 3, Harpers Monthly, 1907. soft. 6.5"" X 10"". ORIGINAL EDITION Publisher-Printing Location: Harper & Brothers, New York Date and Numbering: March 1907, Volume CXIV, Number DCLXXXII Size and Page Count: 6.5 ? X 10 ? Tall, approx. 200 pages, includes advertisements and the back cover with statement of Harper s New Monthly Magazine Condition: Good, binding good, front and back covers are loose with foxing, pages with untrimmed edges are browning on edge, otherwise complete. Illustrations Information: approx. 40 illustrations and many vintage advertisements! ----An excellent opportunity for the collector, researcher or historian---- Articles and information: A sense of scarlet -By Henry, Mrs. Dudeney Nearest the North Pole: First complete report of the Peary Arctic Club's latest expedition -By Robert E. (Robert Edwin) Peary The glass door -By Mary Tracy Earle Manhattan lights -By Edward Sandford Martin The speech of deeds -By Gwendolen Overton Poem: The spirit wind -By Grace Stone Field Our navy fifty years ago -By A.T. (Alfred Thayer) Mahan The bachelor and the baby -By Margaret Cameron Poem: Doom -By Van Tassel Sutphen The story of a spider -By Henry C. (Henry Christopher) McCook Poem: The brown bird -By Alice Brown Poem: The tree -By Harriet Elizabeth Prescott Spofford The weavers: A novel (chaps. XII-XIV) -By Gilbert Parker Poem: Romance -By Charles Buxton Going The white squall -By Lawrence Mott Poem: Moonlight -By Richard Le Gallienne The art of Gari Melchers -By Christian Brinton A happy half-century -By Agnes Repplier A landscape by C.M. Dewey -By Wendell Stanton Howard A life partnership -By Roy Norton Psmith of Pavia: A mystery -By W.L. (William Livingston) Alden With reluctant feet -By Rose Emmet Young The intelligence of the flowers (II) -By Maurice Maeterlinck and Alexander Teixeira de Mattos (Trans.) The eleventh hour -By Perceval Gibbon Poem: Asleep -By Hildegarde Hawthorne Poem: Song -By Mary Coles Carrington Editor's easy chair -By William Dean Howells Editor's study -By Henry Mills Alden Editor's drawer/Fiction: A Lohengrin of the sage-brush -By Arthur Chapman Editor's drawer/Poem: Tobogganing -By John Kendrick Bangs Editor's drawer/Poem: Losted -By Burges Johnson Editor's drawer/Poem: Ballads of a beach-comber. The king of Moo -By Damon Runyon (And other Editor's drawer articles), Harpers Monthly, 1907, 0, New York, NY, USA.: Vista/ Management/ Marvel Pub, 1964. ACTION LIFE Men Magazine Volume 4, #4; (November/1964; ATLAS.;) Front Cover Painting by Harry Schaare; 86 pages including covers; Writers; Paul Brickhill; Ralph C. O'Hara; Nathan S. Lavine; Dean W. Ballenger; Allan W. Eckert; Stanley S. Jacobs; Maxwell Hamilton; Bernard Cameron; Interior Artists; R. DeSoto; Al Rossi; C. Copeland; Contents; "Escape-or-Die Breakout of Johnny King's Desert Rat POWs" (true book bonus) by Paul Brickhill, art by Ray DeSoto. Caught before reaching Allied lines, the downed fliers had to try a second desperate crashout - or face torture by thier guards.; "No-Limit World of Make-Out Divorcees" by Ralph C. O'Hara, MD. Living on alimony, they play the sex game by 'anything goes' rules.; "The Wildest Drag Race on Earth" by Nathan S. Lavine. In Africa's 3200-mile rally it's easier to get killed than win a prize.; "Naked-Nymph Sex Trap at Jap Holdout Compound" by Dean W. Ballenger, art by Al Rossi. It took a bunch of lush females to make the enemy come out and fight.; "They Clearned TNT Island" by Allan W. Eckert. The air force's deadliest job allowed one run, one hit, no error.; "13-Year Manhunt for the Butcher Medic of Prague." by Stanley S. Jacobs. A forgotten file led to the surgeon whose brutality doomed thousands.; "'Get Moscow's Bra-and-Panty Spy Queen'" by Maxwell Hamilton, art by Charles Copeland. NATO's hottest chase produced a sex doll paid in nylon - and lovers.; "GI Hideout at Vietnam's Elephant Village" 12 Yank raiders who joined the natives on Red-killing safaris.; "'Shipwreck' Cameron's Castaway Love Colony" by Bernard Cameron, art by Samson Pollen. Incredible 8-month survival adventure: 2 girls fought for one man.; Punch Lines - 1 page of gags & laughs.; Men with Problems - Cartoon feature.; "The Job Brandie Can't Get" Cheesecake photo layout of Brandie Bello (4 pages) - Action Life's camera idol. "*** Book Order # ADV024; Condition= VG/FN (5.0) = VERY GOOD to FINE; (Above Average Used Condition) Price=US$39.00); Size: 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. TRUE FIRST Edition MAGAZINE Format Thus.. Soft Cover. Very Good to Fine. Illus. by Harry Schaare; R. DeSoto; Al Rossi; C. Copeland;. Magazine.., Vista/ Management/ Marvel Pub, 1964, 3, Doubleday and Company. New York, 1954. First Edition.. Hardcover. Good. Cloth, 284 pages, 16 pages of photos, with dust jacket; a small area of soiling on side edges, moderate age wear to jacket, otherwise in very good condition., Doubleday and Company. New York, 1954, 2.5, Harpers Monthly, 1907. soft. Fair. 6.5"" X 10"". ORIGINAL EDITION Publisher-Printing Location: Harper & Brothers, New York Date and Numbering: February 1907, Volume CXIV, Number DCLXXXI Size and Page Count: 6.5 ? X 10 ? Tall, approx. 200 pages, includes advertisements and the back cover with statement of Harper s New Monthly Magazine Condition: Fair, binding good, front and back covers are loose with tears and discoloration, spine cover fragmented with tears, first few pages have significant discoloration, pages with untrimmed edges are browning on edge, otherwise complete. Illustrations Information: approx. 40 illustrations and many vintage advertisements! ----An excellent opportunity for the collector, researcher or historian---- Articles and information: A sense of scarlet -By Henry, Mrs. Dudeney Nearest the North Pole: First complete report of the Peary Arctic Club's latest expedition -By Robert E. (Robert Edwin) Peary The glass door -By Mary Tracy Earle Manhattan lights -By Edward Sandford Martin The speech of deeds -By Gwendolen Overton Poem: The spirit wind -By Grace Stone Field Our navy fifty years ago -By A.T. (Alfred Thayer) Mahan The bachelor and the baby -By Margaret Cameron Poem: Doom -By Van Tassel Sutphen The story of a spider -By Henry C. (Henry Christopher) McCook Poem: The brown bird -By Alice Brown Poem: The tree -By Harriet Elizabeth Prescott Spofford The weavers: A novel (chaps. XII-XIV) -By Gilbert Parker Poem: Romance -By Charles Buxton Going The white squall -By Lawrence Mott Poem: Moonlight -By Richard Le Gallienne The art of Gari Melchers -By Christian Brinton A happy half-century -By Agnes Repplier A landscape by C.M. Dewey -By Wendell Stanton Howard A life partnership -By Roy Norton Psmith of Pavia: A mystery -By W.L. (William Livingston) Alden With reluctant feet -By Rose Emmet Young The intelligence of the flowers (II) -By Maurice Maeterlinck and Alexander Teixeira de Mattos (Trans.) The eleventh hour -By Perceval Gibbon Poem: Asleep -By Hildegarde Hawthorne Poem: Song -By Mary Coles Carrington Editor's easy chair -By William Dean Howells Editor's study -By Henry Mills Alden Editor's drawer/Fiction: A Lohengrin of the sage-brush -By Arthur Chapman Editor's drawer/Poem: Tobogganing -By John Kendrick Bangs Editor's drawer/Poem: Losted -By Burges Johnson Editor's drawer/Poem: Ballads of a beach-comber. The king of Moo -By Damon Runyon (And other Editor's drawer articles), Harpers Monthly, 1907, 2, Milwaukie, Oregon, USA: Dark Horse Books, 2012. First U.S. Edition 1st Printing. Hardcover. Fine/Fine. 4to - over 9¾ - 12" tall. Various. 187pp. Illustrated endpapers. Black boards w red relief lettering on cover, red lettering and figure on spine. No wear to covers or spine. Binding square and sound. Colour illustrated DJ is clean and without wear. Small quarto. From the Dark Horse Archives series, and featuring the art and story work of Lou Cameron, Roy Krenkel, Harry Lazarus, Lin Streeter, King Ward, George Wilhelms, Al Williamson, and others. With a Foreword by Dan Nadel., Dark Horse Books, 2012, 5, Cincinnati and London: Cincinnati Art Museum in association with D Giles Limited, 2020. Cloth, 256 pages, color illustrations; 28 cm. Accompanies the exhibition of the same name at DIVA, museum for diamonds, jewellery and silver, Antwerp, Belgium: October 29, 2020 to March 15, 2021; Schmuckmuseum, Pforzheim, Germany: March 27 to June 27, 2021; Cincinnati Art Museum, October 22, 2021 to February 6, 2022. Preface by Cameron Silver; with contributions by Cynthia Amneus, Adam MacPharlain [and 3 others]. Firm binding, clean inside copy. Dust jacket protected in a mylar cover. OVERSIZE! No priority/international, except by arrangement. Richly illustrated with colour plates. "Simply Brilliant presents 120 pieces by 50 leading makers of jewelry in the 1960s and '70s, drawn from the Klosterman collection in Cincinnati. Most, if not all, of the individual makers of this era thought of themselves as artists first, jewelers second, and this magnificent new volume is full of stunning one of a kind pieces which reflect the inventive, ground-breaking attitudes of the era. The book explores the 1961 Goldsmiths Hall exhibition in London and its influence on contemporary jewelry designers such as John Donald, Arthur King, Andrew Grima and Gilbert Albert. The 1961 exhibition brought a new direction in jewelry design to the fore, influencing others--including the major jewelry houses such as Cartier, Bulgari, Chopard and Van Cleef and Arpels--paving the way for an international movement in fashion and design. These jewelry designers created unique pieces, often for individual clients, using non-traditional materials and unusual forms. In association with the Cincinnati Art Museum " - Publisher. CONTENTS: Director's foreword, by Cameron Kitchin; Curator's acknowledgments, by Cynthia Amne´us; Preface, by Cameron Silver; Introduction, by Cynthia Amne´us; The International Exhibition of Modern Jewellery, 1890-1961: an exhibition to revitalize jewelry design in Britain, by Rosemary Ransome Wallis; Cross-fertilization: from jewelers to jewelry houses, by Amanda Triossi; The art of fashion and jewelry, by Cynthia Amne´us; A conversation with collector Kimberly Klosterman, by Ruth Peltason; Catalog, by Cynthia Amne´us and Adam MacPha`rlain; Appendix of maker's and designer's marks.. 1st. Hardcover. Fine/Fine. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Collectible., Cincinnati Art Museum in association with D Giles Limited, 2020, 5, * Mit einem Essay von Kenneth Baker. Fotogr.: Andy Goldsworthy und Jerry L. Thompson. Dt. von Annette von Charpentier und Waltraud Goetting. Produziert von Jill Hollis und Ian Cameron. 146477, 0, Martha Galleher, 2007. Presumed First Edition/First Printing. Hardcover. Very good/good +. x, [2], 219, [1] pages. Inscribed on title page. Illustrations. Index. DJ has some wear and soiling. Galleher was the niece of Thompson, conducted her own detailed investigation in 1967 and for years afterwards, corresponded with numerous key actors in the case, and became part of the story. She had in-depth knowledge of Thompson and of the case. Jim Thompson, whose family is from Rehoboth, died mysteriously in Southeast Asia in the 1970s. Jim Thompson or James Harrison Wilson Thompson was born in Greenville, Delaware in 1906. He attended public schools in Wilmington, went on to boarding school at St. Paul's and attended Princeton University, the family university, from 1924 to 1928. Although Thompson had a keen interest in art, he chose to become an architect and went on to study architecture at the University of Pennsylvania. He was a practicing architect in New York City until 1940. With the escalation of the war in Europe in the early 1940s, Thompson volunteered for service in the United States Army, an important turning point in his life. During the Second World War, Thompson was assigned to the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), forerunner of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), a move which offered him an opportunity to see more of the world. Thompson as a member of an OSS group was assigned to work with French forces in North Africa. His assignments also took him into Italy, France and Asia. To prepare for his mission, Thompson undertook rigorous training in jungle survival. He completed the course successfully. However the war ended abruptly as Thompson and the other OSS men were en route to Bangkok. A few weeks later, he assumed the duties of OSS station chief. In late 1946, he received orders to return to the States to receive his military discharge. Thompson was confident that with peace restored and the expansion of air travel, there would be a significant increase in leisure travel to the Far East. Upon their arrival in the capital, these travelers would need acceptable accommodation. Few hotels in Bangkok could then even be considered of international standard. Only one had an ideal location -- the old Oriental, a former palace overlooking the Chao Phraya River that flowed through the capital. It was a meeting place for travelers and a social center for the foreign community. Charlie Chaplin, Noel Coward and Somerset Maugham were just a few of its famous patrons. Excited by the prospects presented, Thompson became actively involved in the reorganization of the Oriental Hotel. By this time, Thompson had developed a certain fondness for the country and its people. He began to seriously contemplate settling down and going into business in Thailand. He foresaw a promising future for the country and wanted to be a part of this process. He decided that upon leaving the service, he would return and take up residence in Thailand permanently. With his artistic inclination, Thompson instantly found the remarkable beauty and extraordinary qualities of Thai silk, both fascinating and alluring. Traditionally the production of raw silk provided a supplemental source of income for many families in the northeast, most of whom were farmers. The raw silk was sent to Bangkok to supply weavers in the capital but by 1946, the hand weaving of Thai silk had become an ailing cottage industry. The use of silk was reserved for special or ceremonial occasions and so the demand for silk was small to start with. Traditional silk weaving process is a slow and laborious process with the silk being used to make the traditional Thai style of dress. Despite its rich color, silk faded quickly with repeated washing as natural vegetable dyes were used in the dyeing process. With the advent of industrialization in the early twentieth century, ever rising demand for cheaper machine-made textiles from factories in Europe and Japan, dealt a devastating blow to traditional silk weaving. Families continued to weave silk but it was predominantly for their own use and little attention was paid to its quality. Even fewer families engaged in silk weaving, its further decline seemed inevitable and irreversible. In spite of such a daunting scenario, Thompson was confident that the brilliance, and distinctive qualities of Thai silk would draw significant interest overseas. To assess this potential, he had several lengths of silk in a range of colors woven to his specifications and set off in 1947 for New York to see if he could successfully market the silk and source sophisticated buyers for his extraordinary merchandise. Throughout his endeavor, Thompson stood by one guiding principle. Whatever he was to accomplish in Thailand must benefit the people of Thailand. He chose to involve the local Thais and insisted that most, if not all, of the profits generated by the business -- the result of their own skills -- had to be returned to the people. In Thompson's view, the real measure of the success of the Thai silk industry was not in the profits generated by the Thai Silk Company he established but by the number of rival companies. In 1962, in recognition of his contribution to Thailand, the Royal Thai government awarded Thompson The Order of the White Elephant. By the time of his disappearance in 1967, there were over one hundred companies competing for a share of the Thai silk business. Today, the Thai silk industry provides employment for approximately 20,000 weaving families., Martha Galleher, 2007, 2.75, Washington, DC: American Academy of Achievement, 1998. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Hardcover. Very good.. Includes illustrations. Approximately 140 pages. Decorative endpapers. Some Illustrations in color. Cover title "1998 Banquet of the Golden Plate, American Academy of Achievement". Secretary of Energy Steven Chu was among the 1998 Captains of Achievement, recipients of the Golden Plate award as "representatives of the many who excel: in the great walks of life. The Achievement Summit was held May 20-24, 1998 in Jackson Hole, WYoming. From Wikipedia: "The Academy of Achievement is a United States-based non-profit organization that aims to bring high profile, successful people from various fields together with "young achievers" to inspire them to succeed. The Academy was founded in 1961 by Hy Peskin (who later changed his name to Brian Blaine Reynolds), and is now run by his son, Wayne Reynolds. The organization is based in Washington, D.C. The organization presents its annual "Golden Plate" award to high achieving individuals. Notable recipients of the award include Barack Obama, Jonas Salk, Wole Soyinka, Ronald Reagan, Maya Angelou, Desmond Tutu and Steve Jobs....The International Achievement Summit was first hosted in 1961. The meeting was originally called the annual "Salute to Excellence" and was later renamed the "Annual Achievement Summit". This annual meeting gives exceptional graduate students the opportunity to interact one-on-one with Nobel Prize-winners in the arts and sciences, public servants, prize-winning journalists, explorers, humanitarians, financiers, athletes, and entertainers. The Academy invites leaders in these categories to attend the Summit and address the students at a series of symposiums and roundtable discussions. The Academy also organizes dinners and other social events where the students are able to meet with honorees or to listen to them speak on various topics. Approximately 30 previous awardees and 20 new ones interact with 200 domestic and international graduate students in an informal setting over the course of four days. The summit ends with a formal dinner where that year's honorees are officially presented with their awards and inducted into the Academy....Until 1999, the meeting was held in a different U.S. city each year. In 1999, the event became the "International Achievement Summit", when the Academy held its first international meeting in Budapest, Hungary. Subsequent Summits have been held in London, England (2000), Dublin, Ireland (2002), Washington, D.C. (2003), ] Chicago, Illinois New York City (2005), Los Angeles, California (2006), Washington, D.C. (2007), Kailua-Kona, Hawaii (2008), Cape Town and Singita Sabi Sand Game Reserve, South Africa (2009), Washington, D.C. (2010), and Washington D.C. (2012). The "Golden Plate" is the Academy of Achievement's official award, which is presented to honorees at the end of its annual Summit. The Academy s Golden Plate Awards Council annually reviews a broad spectrum of candidates for invitation to the Summit. From this list, the council, composed of past "Golden Plate" honorees of the Academy, selects the 20 new awardees. Award recipients are selected for significant achievement in their fields. The Academy has presented awards to over 1, 000 honorees, who have included Nobel Prize winners, presidents, scientists, athletes, authors and entertainers. Notable awardees include Muhammad Ali, Steven Spielberg, Clare Boothe Luce, Willie Mays, Rosa Parks, Elie Wiesel, Jimmy Carter, Bill Gates, Coretta Scott King, Bob Dylan and Desmond Tutu. ] Steve Jobs received the award in 1982, when he was 26, and in his speech to students attending the summit advised that they travel and get to know Zen Buddhists.", American Academy of Achievement, 1998, 3, Los Angeles: DreamWorks Pictures, 2001. First Edition. Specially printed for distribution to members of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences in consideration for nomination of the Best Screenplay. 93 page shooting script for the animated film, Shrek, written by Ted Elliott, Terry Rossio, Joe Stillman, and Roger S,H. Schulman, based on the book by William Steig, directed by Andrew Adamson and Vicky Jenson, featuring the voices of Mike Meyers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz, John Lithgow, Vincent Cassel, and Julie Andrews. Bradbound. Near fine copy with a minor touch of wear to the outer covers. Shrek is based on the childrens book of the same name by William Steig, and tells the story of an ogre (Shrek / Meyers), who, in order to regain possession of his swamp, travels along with an annoying donkey (Murphy) in order to bring a princess (Diaz) to a scheming lord, wishing himself King. The film won an Oscar for Best Animated Feature, and was nominated for Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material Previously Produced or Published., DreamWorks Pictures, 2001, 0, 2003. Buckingham, Philadelphia, Open University Press, 2003. 23cm x 15.2cm. XI, 198 pages. Original Softcover. Excellent, close to new condition with only minor signs of wear. [Disability, Human Rights & Society] Includes for Example: Controversial issues concerning, not just the meaning of disability, but the nature of society, dominant values, quality of life, and even the right to live/ debates/ fundamental challenges to policy, provision and professional practce that are directly relevant to all who work with disabled people, whether in the field of social work, health or education/ questions and debate/ Syslexia: disability or difference/ the emergence of disability studies/ disabling and enabling labels/ genetic medecine and disability/ disabled people and multiple discrimination/ celebrating disability and impairment/ disability arts/ disabled people and independence/ charity/ Connect: a new charity for people with aphasia/ theorizing the body/ inclusion, integration and education policy/ teachers' conceptions of 'specialness'/ what is 'care'/ do disabled people need 'care'/ social movements and social change/ the British Disability Discrimination Act 1995/ the impact of globalization on disabled people/ Swain is Reader in Disability Studies and Principle Lecturer in Research in Faculty of Health, Social Work and Education at the University of Northumbria, Newcastle upon Tyne/ Sally French is Senior Lecturer at the School of Social Sciences at King Alfred's College of Higher Education, Winchester/ Colin Cameron is a freelance disability equality trainer and consultant, providing training and teaching for organizations in south east Scotland., 2003, 0, Hong Kong 1977, Orientations. 10 issues, lack 2: October & December, profusely illustrated in color, very good, clean. . January: Brunei, Hanoi, Gods of Thai dance, Kalimantan, Day- ak art, tricky Tanuki, Commissioner Lin, Ju Ming portfolio. Feb. Sonw countryk, Sinkiang,Japan's Minka, Java's Adu Domba Shrike, Jehangir. March: Khumb Mela, Mongolia, Harunobu Nishiki-e, phoenix-throne Empress Wu, Palau story carvings, Holmes's Macau pastels. April: Cameron Highlands, Shwedagon, Ting ware, Thangka blessing, Roe I& Mughlas, Ryohei portfol- io, Hakka food. May: Korean chests, Ayutthaya, Balinese mass cremation, Wei & Tsin bricks, Pasig river, Shanghai food. June: Bhadgaon & Patan, Benares, Indo-Pakistani pottery, Goy portfolio. July: Sarawak primeval, Japan, Yabkyum Icons, Buzkashi, Manananggal, Self-segmenter, Hong Kong electric. August: Imperial brocade, old Moulmein Pagoda, Kuktch king- dom of salt, Punan of Borneo wilds, Tsingtao, Gibbons of Palau. Sept.: Goa, Penang, Kuo Hsi's early spring. Oct.: Devadasi, India, Seoul, Bhutan, Hung Hsien ware, Borobudur., 21 x 28.5 cm. ., 0, Princeton University Press. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 1995. Hardcover. 0691043671 . Foxing to textblock. From the library of G. P. Goold. Some faint creasing to DJ. ; Callimachus has usually been seen as the archetypal ivory-tower poet, the epitome if not the inventor of the concept of art for art's sake, author of erudite works written to be read in book form by fellow poets and scholars. However, there is much evidence to suggest a different story: a world of civic festivals rather than books and libraries, a world in which poetry and poets played a central and public role. In the course of the argument, Cameron casts fresh light on the lives, dates, works and inter-relationships of most of the other leading poets of the age. Another axiom of modern scholarship is that the object of Callimachus's literary polemic was epic. Yet Cameron aims to show that the thriving school of epic poets celebrating the wars of Hellenistic kings that has so dominated modern study never existed. Elegy was the fashionable genre of the age and the bone of contention between Callimachus and his rivals (all fellow elegists) was the nature of elegaic narrative. A final chapter sketches some of the implications of this revised view of Callimachus and his world for the interpretation of Roman, especially Augustan, poetry. ; 533 pages ., Princeton University Press, 1995, 3<
aus, i.. | Biblio.co.uk Douglas Stewart Fine Books, Studio Bibliografico Marini, Mullen Books, Inc. ABAA / ILAB, Calvello Books, Archive, Robinson Street Books, IOBA, COMIC WORLD, The Franklin Bookstore, COMIC WORLD, Tiber Books, The Franklin Bookstore, Post Horizon Booksellers, LEFT COAST BOOKS, Comenius-Antiquariat, 9033 Georgia Ave, 9033 Georgia Ave, James Pepper Rare Books, Inc., Inanna Rare Books Ltd., Rare Oriental Book Company, ABAA, ILAB - AN ART AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY COMPANY, Ancient World Books Versandkosten: EUR 26.80 Details... |
CALLIMACHUS AND HIS CRITICS - gebunden oder broschiert
1995, ISBN: 9780691043678
Princeton University Press. Very Good+ with no dust jacket. 1995. Hardcover. 0691043671 . Book has very light shelfwear. Scholar's small bookplate to ffep (R. E. Fantham). Small fain… Mehr…
Princeton University Press. Very Good+ with no dust jacket. 1995. Hardcover. 0691043671 . Book has very light shelfwear. Scholar's small bookplate to ffep (R. E. Fantham). Small faint stain to textblock. Minor shelfwear. ; Callimachus has usually been seen as the archetypal ivory-tower poet, the epitome if not the inventor of the concept of art for art's sake, author of erudite works written to be read in book form by fellow poets and scholars. However, there is much evidence to suggest a different story: a world of civic festivals rather than books and libraries, a world in which poetry and poets played a central and public role. In the course of the argument, Cameron casts fresh light on the lives, dates, works and inter-relationships of most of the other leading poets of the age. Another axiom of modern scholarship is that the object of Callimachus's literary polemic was epic. Yet Cameron aims to show that the thriving school of epic poets celebrating the wars of Hellenistic kings that has so dominated modern study never existed. Elegy was the fashionable genre of the age and the bone of contention between Callimachus and his rivals (all fellow elegists) was the nature of elegaic narrative. A final chapter sketches some of the implications of this revised view of Callimachus and his world for the interpretation of Roman, especially Augustan, poetry. ; 533 pages ., Princeton University Press, 1995, 3<
Biblio.co.uk |
CALLIMACHUS AND HIS CRITICS - gebunden oder broschiert
1995, ISBN: 9780691043678
Princeton University Press. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 1995. Hardcover. 0691043671 . Foxing to textblock. From the library of G. P. Goold. Some faint creasing to DJ. ; Callimach… Mehr…
Princeton University Press. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 1995. Hardcover. 0691043671 . Foxing to textblock. From the library of G. P. Goold. Some faint creasing to DJ. ; Callimachus has usually been seen as the archetypal ivory-tower poet, the epitome if not the inventor of the concept of art for art's sake, author of erudite works written to be read in book form by fellow poets and scholars. However, there is much evidence to suggest a different story: a world of civic festivals rather than books and libraries, a world in which poetry and poets played a central and public role. In the course of the argument, Cameron casts fresh light on the lives, dates, works and inter-relationships of most of the other leading poets of the age. Another axiom of modern scholarship is that the object of Callimachus's literary polemic was epic. Yet Cameron aims to show that the thriving school of epic poets celebrating the wars of Hellenistic kings that has so dominated modern study never existed. Elegy was the fashionable genre of the age and the bone of contention between Callimachus and his rivals (all fellow elegists) was the nature of elegaic narrative. A final chapter sketches some of the implications of this revised view of Callimachus and his world for the interpretation of Roman, especially Augustan, poetry. ; 533 pages ., Princeton University Press, 1995, 3<
Biblio.co.uk |
Callimachus and His Critics (Princeton Legacy Library, 5209) - gebunden oder broschiert
1995, ISBN: 9780691043678
Princeton University Press, Gebundene Ausgabe, 533 Seiten, Publiziert: 1995-09-01T00:00:01Z, Produktgruppe: Buch, 2.19 kg, Antike, Bewegungen & Epochen, Literaturgeschichte & -kritik, Lit… Mehr…
Princeton University Press, Gebundene Ausgabe, 533 Seiten, Publiziert: 1995-09-01T00:00:01Z, Produktgruppe: Buch, 2.19 kg, Antike, Bewegungen & Epochen, Literaturgeschichte & -kritik, Literatur & Fiktion, Kategorien, Bücher, Europäische Literatur, Regionen & Kulturkreise, Fremdsprachige Bücher, Englische Bücher, Princeton University Press, 1995<
amazon.de Versandkosten:Los costos de envío pueden diferir de los costos reales. (EUR 3.00) Details... |
Callimachus and His Critics (Princeton Legacy Library, 5209) - gebunden oder broschiert
1995, ISBN: 0691043671
[EAN: 9780691043678], Usado, muy buen estado, [SC: 70.11], [PU: Princeton University Press], Hardback--excellent condition, Books
IberLibro.com Sunshine State Books, Lithia, FL, U.S.A. [3668676] [Calificación: 4 (de 5)] NOT NEW BOOK. Versandkosten: EUR 70.11 Details... |
CALLIMACHUS AND HIS CRITICS - signiertes Exemplar
2022, ISBN: 9780691043678
Taschenbuch, Gebundene Ausgabe, Erstausgabe
Melbourne : Macmillan, 2003. Octavo, boards in dustjacket, pp. 287, 30 unnumbered leaves of plates, a fine copy, as new. Anne Marsh's treatise on the art of photography traces its theore… Mehr…
Melbourne : Macmillan, 2003. Octavo, boards in dustjacket, pp. 287, 30 unnumbered leaves of plates, a fine copy, as new. Anne Marsh's treatise on the art of photography traces its theoretical underpinning from the early debates between the rationalists and the fantasists, through psychoanalytical interpretations, to the theatre of desire. She investigates the role of photography in ghostly performances', the masking of desire' and high camp aesthetics' - through to performance art' and the role of the photographer as a gender terrorist' - as in the work of Del LaGrace Volcano. The study concludes with notable examples of postmodern photography as they have occurred in the Australian context. This ground-breaking work by a leading Monash University academic will interest all students of photography and followers of recent trends in art and art theory. Includes reproductions of works by Leah King-Smith, Gordon Bennett, Tracey Moffatt, Linda Sproul, Pat Brassington, Jill Orr, Mike Parr, Polixeni Papapetrou, Joel Peter Witkin, Man Ray, Hans Bellmer, Julia Margaret Cameron, J. W. Lindt et al., 0, Liverpool: Walker Art Gallery Liverpool, , 1973. Legatura con punto metallico (stapled binding). Molto buono (Very Good). Catalogo di mostra, Liverpool, Walker Art Gallery Liverpool 27 luglio - 28 ottobre 1973. Gli artisti: Philip Vaughan, Phillip King, Mark Boyle, Stuart Brisley, Ken Kiff, Alan Davie, Hubert Dalwood, Paul Huxley, Carl Plackman, Welfare State, Shirley Cameron and Roland Miller, ed altri. Tavole in nero. 4to. pp. 52 + pubblicità . Molto buono (Very Good). ., Walker Art Gallery Liverpool, 1973, 2.5, Liverpool, England: Walker Art Gallery, 1973. Softbound. VG-, small marks on wraps, library stamp on front , light edge wear. White wraps, 75pp, profuse BW illustrations. Exhibition catalog; artists included are Philip Vaughan, Phillip King, Mark Boyle, Stuart Brisley, Ken Kiff, Alan Davie, Hubert Dalwood, Paul Huxley, Carl Plackman, Welfare State, Shirley Cameron and Roland Miller, Natural Theatre, and Great Georges., Walker Art Gallery, 1973, 3, Hamden, Conn: Archon Books, 1994. Reprint edition. Hardcover. Near fine in near fine jacket In archival mylar sleeve; jacket spine mildly sunned./Near Fine. Quarto in dark grey-brown pictorial jacket; xiv, 929 pages: illustrations ; 24 cm; bibliographical references (pages 647-892) and index. Weighs 3 lbs 3 oz before packing. Continues: Both Sides of the Ocean. "This Second Volume of the life of Henry Adams tells a rounded story of a man, a marriage, the epic history he wrote, and the covert role he played in the politics of late nineteenth-century America. Based on new evidence - unpublished, unrecognized, or misinterpreted letters and writings of Adams, and information from people who knew him personally - it gives a startlingly different picture and an unexpectedly new experience of Adams's life. This book, a continuation of volume one, Both Sides of the Ocean: A Biography of Henry Adams, His First Life, 1838-1862, follows Henry into his matured years - first as a Harvard professor, later as a writer and behind-the-scenes Washington power. With his marriage to Marian (Clover) Hooper in 1872, his story becomes the biography of a remarkable union, shattered by Clover's suicide in 1885. Mr. Chalfant documents a respectful and tender partnership that strengthened Adams and enabled him to continue his work in spite of the devastation of his wife's death. This is also a book about Adams's History of the United States: its conception and growth; how it came to be published; what it says that is important and new; and how it consciously draws on earlier epics - Homer's Iliad and Milton's Paradise Lost - in creating an American mythology. Mr. Chalfant is also the first to disclose and delve into Henry Adams's secret actions as diplomat, politician, interceder in presidential elections (from 1868 to 1884), discoverer of the full nature of the gold conspiracy of 1869 with its attendant impeachable offenses and murder, and successful opponent of a putative Blaine administration. The extraordinary scope of this book takes in a whole world - not only of national politics and diplomacy, but also finance, invention, literature, history, science, art, architecture, travel, and exploration. New perspectives on Napoleon, Albert Gallatin, J.Q. Adams, Karl Marx, Jay Gould, Ulysses and Julia Grant, Congressman Garfield, architect H.H. Richardson, as well as Henry's friends John Hay, Clarence King, and Elizabeth Cameron, among others, filter through the rich fabric of Adams's life and times."- Publisher. Historiens -- États-Unis -- Biographies. Historians. Adams, Henry, 1838-1918., Archon Books, 1994, 4, Bruny Island Environment Network , 2014. 1st Edition . Laminated Boards. Fine/No Jacket as Issued. 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall. Fine Pp 137 Index , Illustrated Throughout, Bruny Island Environment Network, 2014, 5, Interview Magazine-A.W.E, 1989. Paperback. Very Good. Prompt shipment, with tracking. we ship in CLEAN SECURE NEW boxes Very Good Copy, Articles include; Elvis Costello emerges after a three-year hiatus; Offbeat author Lindsley Cameron; Let's Get lost, Bruce Weber's film tribute to Chet Baker; Maggie Jakobson, star of New Year's Day; Harper's Editor Lewis Lapham tries TV with his show, Bookmark; Paul Belvoir, silver designer; Novelist Steve Erickson; Ofra Haza, "bazaar" music-maker; Rooftops, Robert Wise's new film musical; Photography dealer Daniel Wolf assembles his first museum show; In February; Serpent Time: What EVer Happened to...; Sound Advice; In View. By Patrick McMullan; Factory Days; on the eve of MoMA's retrospective of the King of Pop, Paul Morrissey and Brigid Berlin remember the Behind-the-scenes life of Andy Warhol; Headly to Toe: John Guare reports on Glenne Headly's pending stardom; Low Tech, High STyle: Steven Holl moves into the architectural fast lane. By Martin filler; Dynasty's Daughter: A look at the forces that brought Benazir Bhutto to power by Tariq Ali; On Woods' Edge: Mavierick actor James Woods talks to Kenneth Turan on location in Canada; Life Without Lennon: Yoko Ono reminisces on the '60's avant-garde and the famous and not-so-famous by Kevin Sessums; Thoroughly Modern Merce: Merce Cunningham brings his inimitable company to New York's City Center this month by Alastair Macaulay; Bracco's Brass: Lorraine Bracco is adding a high polish to her new roles by Robert Walsh; Out of Berlin: Peter STein, West Germany's leading director, brings his Falstaff to BAM by Michael Billington; Clothes From the Casbah: Some spring things designed by Rifat Ozbek, Fashion's Turkish delight. Photographs by Pamela Hanson; The Sage of New Rochelle: E.L. Doctorow discusses the craft of fiction and his latest novel by Jason Epstein; Shelf Life by Christopher Hitchens; Unreal Estate. By William Stadiem; The Rehabillitation of Robert McNamara by Robert Scheer; French Fax by Christina de Liagre; Bedroom Lies by luc Sante; Natasha Fraser rubbed shoulders with collectors at the auctions, starsat a carnegie Hall Tribute and the mystical at St. John the Divine; Pages are clean, Folio, 130 pages, Interview Magazine-A.W.E, 1989, 3, USA: Stanley Publications, 1959. ALL MAN Adventure Magazine Volume 1, #4; (September/1959; Stanley Publications;) 100 pages including covers; Writers: Jim Sacksby; Lou Cameron; Frank Prinz; Fred P. Dollenberg; George F. Fahenstock; John Wallace; Eric Thane; Andrew P. Loman; Jim Halloran; John Wellesley; Pete Devereux; Richard Damon; Dean W. Ballenger; Jack Bernard; B. W. Von Block; Paul Brock; Rudolfo Sergura; Interior Artists: Hugh Hirtle; Paul Gorenson; A. Micarelli; Frank Liljegren; Clarence Doore; V Prezio, McCartney (aka BILL WARD); Contents; ** "Casting Couch on the Deep Six" (adventure) by Jim Sacksby, art by Hugh Hirtle. Never try to double-cross a girl with a gun.; ** "Say 'No' to Laurie Lee' . and Wish You Were Dead (adventure) by Lou Cameron, art by Paul Gorenson. On the street of a ghost town he fought a duel of wits.; ** "It only Hurts When I Laugh" by Anonymous as told to Frank Prinz, art by A. Micarelli. I felt great, like I was King of the world. I twisted even harder and thoughts: 'I'm King and she's gonna be my Queen!'; ** "The Big Fat Flame" as told to Harry Mayer by Colonel Fred P. Dollenberg.; ** "The $100 Ears" (adventure) by George F. Fahenstock. The day they put a bounty on the Japanese.; ** "The Silvertip Terror" (adventure) by John Wallace as told to Eric Thane, art by Frank Liljegren. Never try to figure how a grizzly's gonna act.; ** "' . Let Me Live'" (adventure) by Andrew P. Loman, art by Clarence Doore. A woman will do anything in order to survive.; ** "Wanton Wench of Bloodstone Island" (adventure) by Jim Halloran, art by V. Prezio.; ** "Slaughter in the Longhouse" (adventure) by John Wellesley as told to Pete Devereux. Somewhere in the bloodstained delta they held my bride.; ** "Horror Cults Around You" (expose) by Richard Damon. The Satanists are searching for new, young recruits.; ** "A Snowflake Fell . and Then We Died" (Novelette) by Dean W. Ballenger. There was only one chance for life. start digging.; ** "Danger: Open Drawbridge Ahead" (features) by Jack Bernard. A day in railroading that could have been prevented.; ** "Conspiracy Against the American Male" (feature) by B.W. Von Block. He's the patsy for the wildest con-game in history.; ** "The Bloodiest 'Madame'" (feature) by Paul Brock. No woman was ever more hungry for the taste for human flesh.; ** "Javelina: Big Game for the Small Hunter" (sports) by Rudolfo Segura. Looking for thrills? Try the south Texas killer hog.; ** "Tout Sweet" Cheesecake photo layout of Jacque Pruner from France (5 pages); *** Book Order # ADV103-2 Condition= Cover creasing; date stamp to front cover; shelf wear;. TRUE FIRST Edition MAGAZINE Format Thus.. Soft Cover. Very Good. Illus. by Interior Artists: Hugh Hirtle; Paul Gorenson; A. Micarelli; Frank Liljegren; Clarence Doore; V Prezio, McCartney (aka BILL WARD);. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Magazine.., Stanley Publications, 1959, 3, Harpers Monthly, 1907. soft. 6.5"" X 10"". ORIGINAL EDITION Publisher-Printing Location: Harper & Brothers, New York Date and Numbering: March 1907, Volume CXIV, Number DCLXXXII Size and Page Count: 6.5 ? X 10 ? Tall, approx. 200 pages, includes advertisements and the back cover with statement of Harper s New Monthly Magazine Condition: Good, binding good, front and back covers are loose with foxing, pages with untrimmed edges are browning on edge, otherwise complete. Illustrations Information: approx. 40 illustrations and many vintage advertisements! ----An excellent opportunity for the collector, researcher or historian---- Articles and information: A sense of scarlet -By Henry, Mrs. Dudeney Nearest the North Pole: First complete report of the Peary Arctic Club's latest expedition -By Robert E. (Robert Edwin) Peary The glass door -By Mary Tracy Earle Manhattan lights -By Edward Sandford Martin The speech of deeds -By Gwendolen Overton Poem: The spirit wind -By Grace Stone Field Our navy fifty years ago -By A.T. (Alfred Thayer) Mahan The bachelor and the baby -By Margaret Cameron Poem: Doom -By Van Tassel Sutphen The story of a spider -By Henry C. (Henry Christopher) McCook Poem: The brown bird -By Alice Brown Poem: The tree -By Harriet Elizabeth Prescott Spofford The weavers: A novel (chaps. XII-XIV) -By Gilbert Parker Poem: Romance -By Charles Buxton Going The white squall -By Lawrence Mott Poem: Moonlight -By Richard Le Gallienne The art of Gari Melchers -By Christian Brinton A happy half-century -By Agnes Repplier A landscape by C.M. Dewey -By Wendell Stanton Howard A life partnership -By Roy Norton Psmith of Pavia: A mystery -By W.L. (William Livingston) Alden With reluctant feet -By Rose Emmet Young The intelligence of the flowers (II) -By Maurice Maeterlinck and Alexander Teixeira de Mattos (Trans.) The eleventh hour -By Perceval Gibbon Poem: Asleep -By Hildegarde Hawthorne Poem: Song -By Mary Coles Carrington Editor's easy chair -By William Dean Howells Editor's study -By Henry Mills Alden Editor's drawer/Fiction: A Lohengrin of the sage-brush -By Arthur Chapman Editor's drawer/Poem: Tobogganing -By John Kendrick Bangs Editor's drawer/Poem: Losted -By Burges Johnson Editor's drawer/Poem: Ballads of a beach-comber. The king of Moo -By Damon Runyon (And other Editor's drawer articles), Harpers Monthly, 1907, 0, New York, NY, USA.: Vista/ Management/ Marvel Pub, 1964. ACTION LIFE Men Magazine Volume 4, #4; (November/1964; ATLAS.;) Front Cover Painting by Harry Schaare; 86 pages including covers; Writers; Paul Brickhill; Ralph C. O'Hara; Nathan S. Lavine; Dean W. Ballenger; Allan W. Eckert; Stanley S. Jacobs; Maxwell Hamilton; Bernard Cameron; Interior Artists; R. DeSoto; Al Rossi; C. Copeland; Contents; "Escape-or-Die Breakout of Johnny King's Desert Rat POWs" (true book bonus) by Paul Brickhill, art by Ray DeSoto. Caught before reaching Allied lines, the downed fliers had to try a second desperate crashout - or face torture by thier guards.; "No-Limit World of Make-Out Divorcees" by Ralph C. O'Hara, MD. Living on alimony, they play the sex game by 'anything goes' rules.; "The Wildest Drag Race on Earth" by Nathan S. Lavine. In Africa's 3200-mile rally it's easier to get killed than win a prize.; "Naked-Nymph Sex Trap at Jap Holdout Compound" by Dean W. Ballenger, art by Al Rossi. It took a bunch of lush females to make the enemy come out and fight.; "They Clearned TNT Island" by Allan W. Eckert. The air force's deadliest job allowed one run, one hit, no error.; "13-Year Manhunt for the Butcher Medic of Prague." by Stanley S. Jacobs. A forgotten file led to the surgeon whose brutality doomed thousands.; "'Get Moscow's Bra-and-Panty Spy Queen'" by Maxwell Hamilton, art by Charles Copeland. NATO's hottest chase produced a sex doll paid in nylon - and lovers.; "GI Hideout at Vietnam's Elephant Village" 12 Yank raiders who joined the natives on Red-killing safaris.; "'Shipwreck' Cameron's Castaway Love Colony" by Bernard Cameron, art by Samson Pollen. Incredible 8-month survival adventure: 2 girls fought for one man.; Punch Lines - 1 page of gags & laughs.; Men with Problems - Cartoon feature.; "The Job Brandie Can't Get" Cheesecake photo layout of Brandie Bello (4 pages) - Action Life's camera idol. "*** Book Order # ADV024; Condition= VG/FN (5.0) = VERY GOOD to FINE; (Above Average Used Condition) Price=US$39.00); Size: 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. TRUE FIRST Edition MAGAZINE Format Thus.. Soft Cover. Very Good to Fine. Illus. by Harry Schaare; R. DeSoto; Al Rossi; C. Copeland;. Magazine.., Vista/ Management/ Marvel Pub, 1964, 3, Doubleday and Company. New York, 1954. First Edition.. Hardcover. Good. Cloth, 284 pages, 16 pages of photos, with dust jacket; a small area of soiling on side edges, moderate age wear to jacket, otherwise in very good condition., Doubleday and Company. New York, 1954, 2.5, Harpers Monthly, 1907. soft. Fair. 6.5"" X 10"". ORIGINAL EDITION Publisher-Printing Location: Harper & Brothers, New York Date and Numbering: February 1907, Volume CXIV, Number DCLXXXI Size and Page Count: 6.5 ? X 10 ? Tall, approx. 200 pages, includes advertisements and the back cover with statement of Harper s New Monthly Magazine Condition: Fair, binding good, front and back covers are loose with tears and discoloration, spine cover fragmented with tears, first few pages have significant discoloration, pages with untrimmed edges are browning on edge, otherwise complete. Illustrations Information: approx. 40 illustrations and many vintage advertisements! ----An excellent opportunity for the collector, researcher or historian---- Articles and information: A sense of scarlet -By Henry, Mrs. Dudeney Nearest the North Pole: First complete report of the Peary Arctic Club's latest expedition -By Robert E. (Robert Edwin) Peary The glass door -By Mary Tracy Earle Manhattan lights -By Edward Sandford Martin The speech of deeds -By Gwendolen Overton Poem: The spirit wind -By Grace Stone Field Our navy fifty years ago -By A.T. (Alfred Thayer) Mahan The bachelor and the baby -By Margaret Cameron Poem: Doom -By Van Tassel Sutphen The story of a spider -By Henry C. (Henry Christopher) McCook Poem: The brown bird -By Alice Brown Poem: The tree -By Harriet Elizabeth Prescott Spofford The weavers: A novel (chaps. XII-XIV) -By Gilbert Parker Poem: Romance -By Charles Buxton Going The white squall -By Lawrence Mott Poem: Moonlight -By Richard Le Gallienne The art of Gari Melchers -By Christian Brinton A happy half-century -By Agnes Repplier A landscape by C.M. Dewey -By Wendell Stanton Howard A life partnership -By Roy Norton Psmith of Pavia: A mystery -By W.L. (William Livingston) Alden With reluctant feet -By Rose Emmet Young The intelligence of the flowers (II) -By Maurice Maeterlinck and Alexander Teixeira de Mattos (Trans.) The eleventh hour -By Perceval Gibbon Poem: Asleep -By Hildegarde Hawthorne Poem: Song -By Mary Coles Carrington Editor's easy chair -By William Dean Howells Editor's study -By Henry Mills Alden Editor's drawer/Fiction: A Lohengrin of the sage-brush -By Arthur Chapman Editor's drawer/Poem: Tobogganing -By John Kendrick Bangs Editor's drawer/Poem: Losted -By Burges Johnson Editor's drawer/Poem: Ballads of a beach-comber. The king of Moo -By Damon Runyon (And other Editor's drawer articles), Harpers Monthly, 1907, 2, Milwaukie, Oregon, USA: Dark Horse Books, 2012. First U.S. Edition 1st Printing. Hardcover. Fine/Fine. 4to - over 9¾ - 12" tall. Various. 187pp. Illustrated endpapers. Black boards w red relief lettering on cover, red lettering and figure on spine. No wear to covers or spine. Binding square and sound. Colour illustrated DJ is clean and without wear. Small quarto. From the Dark Horse Archives series, and featuring the art and story work of Lou Cameron, Roy Krenkel, Harry Lazarus, Lin Streeter, King Ward, George Wilhelms, Al Williamson, and others. With a Foreword by Dan Nadel., Dark Horse Books, 2012, 5, Cincinnati and London: Cincinnati Art Museum in association with D Giles Limited, 2020. Cloth, 256 pages, color illustrations; 28 cm. Accompanies the exhibition of the same name at DIVA, museum for diamonds, jewellery and silver, Antwerp, Belgium: October 29, 2020 to March 15, 2021; Schmuckmuseum, Pforzheim, Germany: March 27 to June 27, 2021; Cincinnati Art Museum, October 22, 2021 to February 6, 2022. Preface by Cameron Silver; with contributions by Cynthia Amneus, Adam MacPharlain [and 3 others]. Firm binding, clean inside copy. Dust jacket protected in a mylar cover. OVERSIZE! No priority/international, except by arrangement. Richly illustrated with colour plates. "Simply Brilliant presents 120 pieces by 50 leading makers of jewelry in the 1960s and '70s, drawn from the Klosterman collection in Cincinnati. Most, if not all, of the individual makers of this era thought of themselves as artists first, jewelers second, and this magnificent new volume is full of stunning one of a kind pieces which reflect the inventive, ground-breaking attitudes of the era. The book explores the 1961 Goldsmiths Hall exhibition in London and its influence on contemporary jewelry designers such as John Donald, Arthur King, Andrew Grima and Gilbert Albert. The 1961 exhibition brought a new direction in jewelry design to the fore, influencing others--including the major jewelry houses such as Cartier, Bulgari, Chopard and Van Cleef and Arpels--paving the way for an international movement in fashion and design. These jewelry designers created unique pieces, often for individual clients, using non-traditional materials and unusual forms. In association with the Cincinnati Art Museum " - Publisher. CONTENTS: Director's foreword, by Cameron Kitchin; Curator's acknowledgments, by Cynthia Amne´us; Preface, by Cameron Silver; Introduction, by Cynthia Amne´us; The International Exhibition of Modern Jewellery, 1890-1961: an exhibition to revitalize jewelry design in Britain, by Rosemary Ransome Wallis; Cross-fertilization: from jewelers to jewelry houses, by Amanda Triossi; The art of fashion and jewelry, by Cynthia Amne´us; A conversation with collector Kimberly Klosterman, by Ruth Peltason; Catalog, by Cynthia Amne´us and Adam MacPha`rlain; Appendix of maker's and designer's marks.. 1st. Hardcover. Fine/Fine. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Collectible., Cincinnati Art Museum in association with D Giles Limited, 2020, 5, * Mit einem Essay von Kenneth Baker. Fotogr.: Andy Goldsworthy und Jerry L. Thompson. Dt. von Annette von Charpentier und Waltraud Goetting. Produziert von Jill Hollis und Ian Cameron. 146477, 0, Martha Galleher, 2007. Presumed First Edition/First Printing. Hardcover. Very good/good +. x, [2], 219, [1] pages. Inscribed on title page. Illustrations. Index. DJ has some wear and soiling. Galleher was the niece of Thompson, conducted her own detailed investigation in 1967 and for years afterwards, corresponded with numerous key actors in the case, and became part of the story. She had in-depth knowledge of Thompson and of the case. Jim Thompson, whose family is from Rehoboth, died mysteriously in Southeast Asia in the 1970s. Jim Thompson or James Harrison Wilson Thompson was born in Greenville, Delaware in 1906. He attended public schools in Wilmington, went on to boarding school at St. Paul's and attended Princeton University, the family university, from 1924 to 1928. Although Thompson had a keen interest in art, he chose to become an architect and went on to study architecture at the University of Pennsylvania. He was a practicing architect in New York City until 1940. With the escalation of the war in Europe in the early 1940s, Thompson volunteered for service in the United States Army, an important turning point in his life. During the Second World War, Thompson was assigned to the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), forerunner of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), a move which offered him an opportunity to see more of the world. Thompson as a member of an OSS group was assigned to work with French forces in North Africa. His assignments also took him into Italy, France and Asia. To prepare for his mission, Thompson undertook rigorous training in jungle survival. He completed the course successfully. However the war ended abruptly as Thompson and the other OSS men were en route to Bangkok. A few weeks later, he assumed the duties of OSS station chief. In late 1946, he received orders to return to the States to receive his military discharge. Thompson was confident that with peace restored and the expansion of air travel, there would be a significant increase in leisure travel to the Far East. Upon their arrival in the capital, these travelers would need acceptable accommodation. Few hotels in Bangkok could then even be considered of international standard. Only one had an ideal location -- the old Oriental, a former palace overlooking the Chao Phraya River that flowed through the capital. It was a meeting place for travelers and a social center for the foreign community. Charlie Chaplin, Noel Coward and Somerset Maugham were just a few of its famous patrons. Excited by the prospects presented, Thompson became actively involved in the reorganization of the Oriental Hotel. By this time, Thompson had developed a certain fondness for the country and its people. He began to seriously contemplate settling down and going into business in Thailand. He foresaw a promising future for the country and wanted to be a part of this process. He decided that upon leaving the service, he would return and take up residence in Thailand permanently. With his artistic inclination, Thompson instantly found the remarkable beauty and extraordinary qualities of Thai silk, both fascinating and alluring. Traditionally the production of raw silk provided a supplemental source of income for many families in the northeast, most of whom were farmers. The raw silk was sent to Bangkok to supply weavers in the capital but by 1946, the hand weaving of Thai silk had become an ailing cottage industry. The use of silk was reserved for special or ceremonial occasions and so the demand for silk was small to start with. Traditional silk weaving process is a slow and laborious process with the silk being used to make the traditional Thai style of dress. Despite its rich color, silk faded quickly with repeated washing as natural vegetable dyes were used in the dyeing process. With the advent of industrialization in the early twentieth century, ever rising demand for cheaper machine-made textiles from factories in Europe and Japan, dealt a devastating blow to traditional silk weaving. Families continued to weave silk but it was predominantly for their own use and little attention was paid to its quality. Even fewer families engaged in silk weaving, its further decline seemed inevitable and irreversible. In spite of such a daunting scenario, Thompson was confident that the brilliance, and distinctive qualities of Thai silk would draw significant interest overseas. To assess this potential, he had several lengths of silk in a range of colors woven to his specifications and set off in 1947 for New York to see if he could successfully market the silk and source sophisticated buyers for his extraordinary merchandise. Throughout his endeavor, Thompson stood by one guiding principle. Whatever he was to accomplish in Thailand must benefit the people of Thailand. He chose to involve the local Thais and insisted that most, if not all, of the profits generated by the business -- the result of their own skills -- had to be returned to the people. In Thompson's view, the real measure of the success of the Thai silk industry was not in the profits generated by the Thai Silk Company he established but by the number of rival companies. In 1962, in recognition of his contribution to Thailand, the Royal Thai government awarded Thompson The Order of the White Elephant. By the time of his disappearance in 1967, there were over one hundred companies competing for a share of the Thai silk business. Today, the Thai silk industry provides employment for approximately 20,000 weaving families., Martha Galleher, 2007, 2.75, Washington, DC: American Academy of Achievement, 1998. Presumed first edition/first printing thus. Hardcover. Very good.. Includes illustrations. Approximately 140 pages. Decorative endpapers. Some Illustrations in color. Cover title "1998 Banquet of the Golden Plate, American Academy of Achievement". Secretary of Energy Steven Chu was among the 1998 Captains of Achievement, recipients of the Golden Plate award as "representatives of the many who excel: in the great walks of life. The Achievement Summit was held May 20-24, 1998 in Jackson Hole, WYoming. From Wikipedia: "The Academy of Achievement is a United States-based non-profit organization that aims to bring high profile, successful people from various fields together with "young achievers" to inspire them to succeed. The Academy was founded in 1961 by Hy Peskin (who later changed his name to Brian Blaine Reynolds), and is now run by his son, Wayne Reynolds. The organization is based in Washington, D.C. The organization presents its annual "Golden Plate" award to high achieving individuals. Notable recipients of the award include Barack Obama, Jonas Salk, Wole Soyinka, Ronald Reagan, Maya Angelou, Desmond Tutu and Steve Jobs....The International Achievement Summit was first hosted in 1961. The meeting was originally called the annual "Salute to Excellence" and was later renamed the "Annual Achievement Summit". This annual meeting gives exceptional graduate students the opportunity to interact one-on-one with Nobel Prize-winners in the arts and sciences, public servants, prize-winning journalists, explorers, humanitarians, financiers, athletes, and entertainers. The Academy invites leaders in these categories to attend the Summit and address the students at a series of symposiums and roundtable discussions. The Academy also organizes dinners and other social events where the students are able to meet with honorees or to listen to them speak on various topics. Approximately 30 previous awardees and 20 new ones interact with 200 domestic and international graduate students in an informal setting over the course of four days. The summit ends with a formal dinner where that year's honorees are officially presented with their awards and inducted into the Academy....Until 1999, the meeting was held in a different U.S. city each year. In 1999, the event became the "International Achievement Summit", when the Academy held its first international meeting in Budapest, Hungary. Subsequent Summits have been held in London, England (2000), Dublin, Ireland (2002), Washington, D.C. (2003), ] Chicago, Illinois New York City (2005), Los Angeles, California (2006), Washington, D.C. (2007), Kailua-Kona, Hawaii (2008), Cape Town and Singita Sabi Sand Game Reserve, South Africa (2009), Washington, D.C. (2010), and Washington D.C. (2012). The "Golden Plate" is the Academy of Achievement's official award, which is presented to honorees at the end of its annual Summit. The Academy s Golden Plate Awards Council annually reviews a broad spectrum of candidates for invitation to the Summit. From this list, the council, composed of past "Golden Plate" honorees of the Academy, selects the 20 new awardees. Award recipients are selected for significant achievement in their fields. The Academy has presented awards to over 1, 000 honorees, who have included Nobel Prize winners, presidents, scientists, athletes, authors and entertainers. Notable awardees include Muhammad Ali, Steven Spielberg, Clare Boothe Luce, Willie Mays, Rosa Parks, Elie Wiesel, Jimmy Carter, Bill Gates, Coretta Scott King, Bob Dylan and Desmond Tutu. ] Steve Jobs received the award in 1982, when he was 26, and in his speech to students attending the summit advised that they travel and get to know Zen Buddhists.", American Academy of Achievement, 1998, 3, Los Angeles: DreamWorks Pictures, 2001. First Edition. Specially printed for distribution to members of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences in consideration for nomination of the Best Screenplay. 93 page shooting script for the animated film, Shrek, written by Ted Elliott, Terry Rossio, Joe Stillman, and Roger S,H. Schulman, based on the book by William Steig, directed by Andrew Adamson and Vicky Jenson, featuring the voices of Mike Meyers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz, John Lithgow, Vincent Cassel, and Julie Andrews. Bradbound. Near fine copy with a minor touch of wear to the outer covers. Shrek is based on the childrens book of the same name by William Steig, and tells the story of an ogre (Shrek / Meyers), who, in order to regain possession of his swamp, travels along with an annoying donkey (Murphy) in order to bring a princess (Diaz) to a scheming lord, wishing himself King. The film won an Oscar for Best Animated Feature, and was nominated for Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material Previously Produced or Published., DreamWorks Pictures, 2001, 0, 2003. Buckingham, Philadelphia, Open University Press, 2003. 23cm x 15.2cm. XI, 198 pages. Original Softcover. Excellent, close to new condition with only minor signs of wear. [Disability, Human Rights & Society] Includes for Example: Controversial issues concerning, not just the meaning of disability, but the nature of society, dominant values, quality of life, and even the right to live/ debates/ fundamental challenges to policy, provision and professional practce that are directly relevant to all who work with disabled people, whether in the field of social work, health or education/ questions and debate/ Syslexia: disability or difference/ the emergence of disability studies/ disabling and enabling labels/ genetic medecine and disability/ disabled people and multiple discrimination/ celebrating disability and impairment/ disability arts/ disabled people and independence/ charity/ Connect: a new charity for people with aphasia/ theorizing the body/ inclusion, integration and education policy/ teachers' conceptions of 'specialness'/ what is 'care'/ do disabled people need 'care'/ social movements and social change/ the British Disability Discrimination Act 1995/ the impact of globalization on disabled people/ Swain is Reader in Disability Studies and Principle Lecturer in Research in Faculty of Health, Social Work and Education at the University of Northumbria, Newcastle upon Tyne/ Sally French is Senior Lecturer at the School of Social Sciences at King Alfred's College of Higher Education, Winchester/ Colin Cameron is a freelance disability equality trainer and consultant, providing training and teaching for organizations in south east Scotland., 2003, 0, Hong Kong 1977, Orientations. 10 issues, lack 2: October & December, profusely illustrated in color, very good, clean. . January: Brunei, Hanoi, Gods of Thai dance, Kalimantan, Day- ak art, tricky Tanuki, Commissioner Lin, Ju Ming portfolio. Feb. Sonw countryk, Sinkiang,Japan's Minka, Java's Adu Domba Shrike, Jehangir. March: Khumb Mela, Mongolia, Harunobu Nishiki-e, phoenix-throne Empress Wu, Palau story carvings, Holmes's Macau pastels. April: Cameron Highlands, Shwedagon, Ting ware, Thangka blessing, Roe I& Mughlas, Ryohei portfol- io, Hakka food. May: Korean chests, Ayutthaya, Balinese mass cremation, Wei & Tsin bricks, Pasig river, Shanghai food. June: Bhadgaon & Patan, Benares, Indo-Pakistani pottery, Goy portfolio. July: Sarawak primeval, Japan, Yabkyum Icons, Buzkashi, Manananggal, Self-segmenter, Hong Kong electric. August: Imperial brocade, old Moulmein Pagoda, Kuktch king- dom of salt, Punan of Borneo wilds, Tsingtao, Gibbons of Palau. Sept.: Goa, Penang, Kuo Hsi's early spring. Oct.: Devadasi, India, Seoul, Bhutan, Hung Hsien ware, Borobudur., 21 x 28.5 cm. ., 0, Princeton University Press. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 1995. Hardcover. 0691043671 . Foxing to textblock. From the library of G. P. Goold. Some faint creasing to DJ. ; Callimachus has usually been seen as the archetypal ivory-tower poet, the epitome if not the inventor of the concept of art for art's sake, author of erudite works written to be read in book form by fellow poets and scholars. However, there is much evidence to suggest a different story: a world of civic festivals rather than books and libraries, a world in which poetry and poets played a central and public role. In the course of the argument, Cameron casts fresh light on the lives, dates, works and inter-relationships of most of the other leading poets of the age. Another axiom of modern scholarship is that the object of Callimachus's literary polemic was epic. Yet Cameron aims to show that the thriving school of epic poets celebrating the wars of Hellenistic kings that has so dominated modern study never existed. Elegy was the fashionable genre of the age and the bone of contention between Callimachus and his rivals (all fellow elegists) was the nature of elegaic narrative. A final chapter sketches some of the implications of this revised view of Callimachus and his world for the interpretation of Roman, especially Augustan, poetry. ; 533 pages ., Princeton University Press, 1995, 3<
Cameron, Alan:
CALLIMACHUS AND HIS CRITICS - gebunden oder broschiert1995, ISBN: 9780691043678
Princeton University Press. Very Good+ with no dust jacket. 1995. Hardcover. 0691043671 . Book has very light shelfwear. Scholar's small bookplate to ffep (R. E. Fantham). Small fain… Mehr…
Princeton University Press. Very Good+ with no dust jacket. 1995. Hardcover. 0691043671 . Book has very light shelfwear. Scholar's small bookplate to ffep (R. E. Fantham). Small faint stain to textblock. Minor shelfwear. ; Callimachus has usually been seen as the archetypal ivory-tower poet, the epitome if not the inventor of the concept of art for art's sake, author of erudite works written to be read in book form by fellow poets and scholars. However, there is much evidence to suggest a different story: a world of civic festivals rather than books and libraries, a world in which poetry and poets played a central and public role. In the course of the argument, Cameron casts fresh light on the lives, dates, works and inter-relationships of most of the other leading poets of the age. Another axiom of modern scholarship is that the object of Callimachus's literary polemic was epic. Yet Cameron aims to show that the thriving school of epic poets celebrating the wars of Hellenistic kings that has so dominated modern study never existed. Elegy was the fashionable genre of the age and the bone of contention between Callimachus and his rivals (all fellow elegists) was the nature of elegaic narrative. A final chapter sketches some of the implications of this revised view of Callimachus and his world for the interpretation of Roman, especially Augustan, poetry. ; 533 pages ., Princeton University Press, 1995, 3<
CALLIMACHUS AND HIS CRITICS - gebunden oder broschiert
1995
ISBN: 9780691043678
Princeton University Press. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 1995. Hardcover. 0691043671 . Foxing to textblock. From the library of G. P. Goold. Some faint creasing to DJ. ; Callimach… Mehr…
Princeton University Press. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 1995. Hardcover. 0691043671 . Foxing to textblock. From the library of G. P. Goold. Some faint creasing to DJ. ; Callimachus has usually been seen as the archetypal ivory-tower poet, the epitome if not the inventor of the concept of art for art's sake, author of erudite works written to be read in book form by fellow poets and scholars. However, there is much evidence to suggest a different story: a world of civic festivals rather than books and libraries, a world in which poetry and poets played a central and public role. In the course of the argument, Cameron casts fresh light on the lives, dates, works and inter-relationships of most of the other leading poets of the age. Another axiom of modern scholarship is that the object of Callimachus's literary polemic was epic. Yet Cameron aims to show that the thriving school of epic poets celebrating the wars of Hellenistic kings that has so dominated modern study never existed. Elegy was the fashionable genre of the age and the bone of contention between Callimachus and his rivals (all fellow elegists) was the nature of elegaic narrative. A final chapter sketches some of the implications of this revised view of Callimachus and his world for the interpretation of Roman, especially Augustan, poetry. ; 533 pages ., Princeton University Press, 1995, 3<
Callimachus and His Critics (Princeton Legacy Library, 5209) - gebunden oder broschiert
1995, ISBN: 9780691043678
Princeton University Press, Gebundene Ausgabe, 533 Seiten, Publiziert: 1995-09-01T00:00:01Z, Produktgruppe: Buch, 2.19 kg, Antike, Bewegungen & Epochen, Literaturgeschichte & -kritik, Lit… Mehr…
Princeton University Press, Gebundene Ausgabe, 533 Seiten, Publiziert: 1995-09-01T00:00:01Z, Produktgruppe: Buch, 2.19 kg, Antike, Bewegungen & Epochen, Literaturgeschichte & -kritik, Literatur & Fiktion, Kategorien, Bücher, Europäische Literatur, Regionen & Kulturkreise, Fremdsprachige Bücher, Englische Bücher, Princeton University Press, 1995<
Callimachus and His Critics (Princeton Legacy Library, 5209) - gebunden oder broschiert
1995, ISBN: 0691043671
[EAN: 9780691043678], Usado, muy buen estado, [SC: 70.11], [PU: Princeton University Press], Hardback--excellent condition, Books
Es werden 140 Ergebnisse angezeigt. Vielleicht möchten Sie Ihre Suchkriterien verfeinern, Filter aktivieren oder die Sortierreihenfolge ändern.
Bibliographische Daten des bestpassenden Buches
Autor: | |
Titel: | |
ISBN-Nummer: |
Detailangaben zum Buch - Callimachus and His Critics (Princeton Legacy Library, 5209)
EAN (ISBN-13): 9780691043678
ISBN (ISBN-10): 0691043671
Gebundene Ausgabe
Taschenbuch
Erscheinungsjahr: 1995
Herausgeber: Princeton University Press
Buch in der Datenbank seit 2008-01-16T10:19:57+01:00 (Berlin)
Detailseite zuletzt geändert am 2023-09-08T20:58:24+02:00 (Berlin)
ISBN/EAN: 0691043671
ISBN - alternative Schreibweisen:
0-691-04367-1, 978-0-691-04367-8
Alternative Schreibweisen und verwandte Suchbegriffe:
Autor des Buches: alan cameron
Titel des Buches: callimachus and his critics
Weitere, andere Bücher, die diesem Buch sehr ähnlich sein könnten:
Neuestes ähnliches Buch:
9780691606125 Callimachus and His Critics Alan Cameron Author (Cameron, Alan)
< zum Archiv...