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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Burlington, Mass. :Morgan Kaufmann,
    UID:
    almahu_9949697507702882
    Format: 1 online resource (164 p.)
    Edition: 1st edition
    ISBN: 1-282-73794-5 , 9786612737947 , 0-12-378625-8
    Content: Interaction Designers-whether practicing as Usability Engineers, Visual Interface Designers, or Information Architects-attempt to understand and shape human behavior in order to design products that are at once usable, useful, and desirable. Although the value of design is now recognized as essential to product development, the field is often misunderstood by managers and other team members, who don't understand a designer's role in a team. This can cause inefficient and ineffective products. Thoughts on Interaction Design gives individuals engaged in this profession the dialo
    Note: Description based upon print version of record. , Front Cover; Dedication; Copyright Page; Thoughts on Interaction Design; Contents; Introduction; Section One: Understanding Interaction Design; Chapter One: Multiple Roots, and an Uncertain Future; Human Factors in the creation of mass-produced objects; Human Factors in the creation of software; Convergent product design creates new challenges; Understanding the role of technology; Interaction Design as a professional discipline; Designing and shaping behavior; ChapterTwo: Computing and Human Computer Interaction; Understanding the history of human-computerinteraction , Cyborgs and the ubiquity oftechnologyInteraction Design in an Engineering - CentricWorld; Process; Credibility; Prototyping; What have we learned?; Section Two: Connecting People, Emotions, and Technology; Chapter Three: A Process for Thinking aboutPeople; The process ofdesign; Defining the design problem or opportunity; Discovering hidden wants, needs, and desires; A cyclical process of synthesis, creation, and refinement; A thoughtful reflection of the process; The role of intuition; The role of Design in the business process; Usable, useful, and desirable; ChapterFour: Managing Complexity , Structuringdata in order to make useful informationDesigningwith the fourth dimension in mind; Using a concept map to understandrelationship and vocabulary; Using a Process Flow Diagram to understand the logical flow of entities; Theclassification of words; Chapter Five: Shaping Aestheticsto Inform Experience; Aesthetic relationships betweennature and technology; Visualform language creates product families; Therole of brand in visual families; Moving from artifacts to experiences; Interaction Design as BusinessLubricant; Tradition be damned; Driven-notdriving; Doers-notthinkers , No silver bulletsThinking is the new black; Enter the Interaction Designer; Implementing strategy; It's Design, not design; Section Three: The Rhetorical Nature of Interaction Design; Chapter Six: Interaction Designand Communication; Thedesigner as persuader; Designedartifacts identify an underlying culture; Designlanguage can provide the cultural substance; Thehonesty of poetic interactions; Investigatingmindfulness; Providinga vivid and refined attention to sensory detail; Apoetic interaction may not be a usable interaction; On the Nature of Interaction asLanguage , Interaction: Framing the Concept within DesignLanguage: passing meaning to others; Metaphors: enabling people to understand; Affordances: Interaction and Language in Practice; Design as communication: the essential theme revealed; Rhetorical meaning; Interpretations of signs; Making Meaning; Section Four: Challenges Facing Interaction Design in Industry; Chapter Seven: The Political Dynamics of ProductDevelopment; Interactiondesign at the center of the world; Getting DesignDone; Working with product managers; Your job is to make decisions and deliver them to otherpeople , Jack of all trades, master of none , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-12-378624-X
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books ; Electronic books
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge :Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almahu_9947414523302882
    Format: 1 online resource (viii, 281 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 9780511613456 (ebook)
    Content: An increasing number of contemporary scientists, philosophers and theologians downplay their professional authority and describe their work as simply 'telling stories about the world'. If this is so, Stephen Prickett argues, literary criticism can (and should) be applied to all these fields. Such new-found modesty is not necessarily postmodernist scepticism towards all grand narratives, but it often conceals a widespread confusion and naïvety about what 'telling stories', 'description' or 'narrative', actually involves. While postmodernists define 'narrative' in opposition to the experimental 'knowledge' of science (Lyotard), some scientists insist that science is itself story-telling (Gould); certain philosophers and theologians even see all knowledge simply as stories created by language (Rorty; Cupitt). Yet story telling is neither innocent nor empty-handed. Prickett argues that since the eighteenth century there have been only two possible ways of understanding the world: the fundamentalist, and the ironic.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015). , Machine generated contents note: 1 Postmodernism, grand narratives and just-so stories -- Postmodernism and grand narratives -- Just-so stories -- Narrative and irony -- Language, culture and reality -- 2 Newton and Kissinger: Science as irony? -- Said, Kissinger and Newton -- Revolutions and paradigms -- Models of reality -- Ambiguity and irony -- 3 Learning to say 'I': Literature and subjectivity -- Interior and exterior worlds -- The idea of literature -- The ideal of the fragment -- Two kinds of truth? -- 4 Reconstructing religion: Fragmentation, typology -- and symbolism -- From religion to religions -- Religions of nature and of the heart -- Millenarian fragments and organic wholes -- The aesthetics of irony: Keble and Rossetti -- 5 The ache in the missing limb: Language, truth and -- presence -- Coleridge: The language of the Bible -- Newman: The physiognomy of development -- Polanyi: The origins of meaning -- Steiner, Derrida and Hart: Presence and absence -- 6 Twentieth-century fundamentalisms: Theology, truth -- and irony -- Rorty: Language and reality -- Postmodernism and poetic language: Religion as aesthetics -- Logos and logothete: Reading reality -- 7 Science and religion: Language, metaphor and -- consilience -- Etching with universal acid -- Language as change -- A rebirth of images -- The fabric of the universe -- Concluding conversational postscript: The tomb -- of Napoleon.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9780521811361
    Language: English
    Subjects: Theology , English Studies
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  • 3
    UID:
    almahu_9948327688402882
    Format: 1 online resource (334 pages)
    ISBN: 9783110480627 (e-book) , 9783110482201 (e-book)
    Note: Fundamentals for a cognitive semantics of Latin : image schemas and metaphor in the meaning of Roman animus-concept / William Short -- Odyssey 20 and cognitive science : a case study / Siobhan Privitera -- Bodies of knowledge : metaphor and mnemonic practice in ancient historiography / Jennifer J. Devereaux -- Feeling words : embodied metaphors in Seven against Thebes / Afroditi Angelopoulou -- The affective ancient theatre, a bio-cultural cognitive approach / Peter Meineck -- The sensed presence as an analytical tool in historical research / Gabriel Herman -- Transforming knowledge : using arts-based activity to explore classics and therapeutic practice / Alex Wardrop, Georgie Huntley and Silvie Kilgallon -- Learned helplessness, the structure of the Telemachy and Odysseus' return / Joel Christensen -- Anticipating audiences : Hesiod's works and days and cognitive psychology / Lilah Grace Canevaro -- Why does Orestes stay mad? / Marcia Dobson -- The elegiac revolution : Deleuze, desire, and Propertius' monobiblos / Kyle Khellaf -- Staging female selves in Sapphic poetry / Katerina Ladianou -- Developmental psychologies in the Roman world : empiricism or ideology? / Jacob Mackey -- Irony in Cicero's post-Reditum speeches / Luca Grillo -- Psychoanalysis and the rhetorical tradition : theory and technique / Paul Earlie -- Thucydides, Groupthink, and the Sicilian expedition fiasco / Aaron Turner -- Mystic initiation and the near-death experience / Richard Seaford -- Burton's Anatomy as classical, and present-day, mind science / Jennifer Radden -- The psychology of psychotherapy : ancient and modern perspectives / Christopher Gill.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Psychology and the classics : a dialogue of disciplines. Berlin ; Boston : De Gruyter, c2018 ISBN 9783110478518
    Language: English
    Subjects: History , Psychology , Ancient Studies
    RVK:
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    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Konferenzschrift ; Konferenzschrift
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge :Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almahu_9947414417302882
    Format: 1 online resource (xii, 278 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 9780511518638 (ebook)
    Series Statement: Literature, culture, theory ; 19
    Content: This is the first book to explore the full range and import of Lacan's theory of poetry and its relationship to his understanding of the subject and historicity. Gilbert Chaitin's lucid and accessible study of this famously complex thinker shows how Lacan moves beyond the traditionally hostile polarities of mythos and logos, poetics and philosophy, to conceive of the subject as a complex interplay between psychoanalysis, rationality and history. Lacan's incorporation of historical necessity into the formation of subjectivity enables him to illuminate the role literature plays in the creation of selfhood. Lacan's metaphor of the subject, Chaitin argues, draws not only on Saussure, Jakobson, Freud, Heidegger and Hegel but on hitherto unacknowledged sources such as Bertrand Russell and I.A. Richards. Chaitin explores the ambiguities, contradictions and singularities of Lacan's immensely influential work to provide a definitive account of the theoretical development across his entire career.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015). , 1. Introduction -- 2. Treeing Lacan, or the Meaning of Metaphor -- 3. A Being of Significance -- 4. From Logic to Ethics: Transference and the Letter -- 5. Desire and Culture: Transference and the Other -- 6. The Subject and the Symbolic Order: Historicity, Mathematics, Poetry -- 7. Conclusion: Lacan and Contemporary Criticism.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9780521497282
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge :Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almahu_9947415033602882
    Format: 1 online resource (xiii, 308 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 9780511598050 (ebook)
    Content: Although Paul Ricoeur's writings are widely and appreciatively read by theologians, this book offers a full, sympathetic yet critical account of Ricoeur's theory of narrative interpretation and its contribution to theology. Unlike many previous studies of Ricoeur, Part I argues that Ricoeur's hermeneutics must be viewed in the light of his overall philosophical agenda, as a fusion and continuation of the unfinished projects of Kant and Heidegger. Particularly helpful is the focus on Ricoeur's recent narrative theory as the context in which Ricoeur deals with problems of time and the creative imagination; and it becomes clear that narrative stands at the crossroads of Ricoeur's search for the meaning of human being as well as his search for the meaning of texts. Part II examines the potential of Ricoeur's narrative theory for resolving certain theological problems, such as the dichotomy betweens the Jesus of history and the Christ of faith.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015). , The passion for the possible: preface to Paul Ricoeur -- pt. 1. The passion for the possible in Ricoeur's philosophy and hermeneutics -- Human being, possibility, and time -- Hope within the limits of Kant alone? -- Metaphor, poetry, and the possible -- Narrative: the 'substance' of things hoped for -- pt. 2. The passion for the possible and biblical narrative stories or histories of Jesus -- A newer hermeneutic: postscript to Bultmann -- A 'literal' Gospel? -- The Gospels as 'tales about time' -- Passion of Jesus, power of Christ: the possibility of human freedom -- Conclusion: -- The Bible and one philosopher.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9780521344258
    Language: English
    Subjects: Theology
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  • 6
    UID:
    almahu_9947952484802882
    Format: 1 online resource (x, 269 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 9781108569316 (ebook)
    Series Statement: Cambridge studies in Romanticism ; 121
    Content: Before the ideas we now define as Romanticism took hold the word 'atmosphere' meant only the physical stuff of air; afterwards, it could mean almost anything, from a historical mood or spirit to the character or style of an artwork. Thomas H. Ford traces this shift of meaning, which he sees as first occurring in the poetry of William Wordsworth. Gradually 'air' and 'atmosphere' took on the new status of metaphor as Wordsworth and other poets re-imagined poetry as a textual area of aerial communication - conveying the breath of a transitory moment to other times and places via the printed page. Reading Romantic poetry through this ecological and ecocritical lens Ford goes on to ask what the poems of the Romantic period mean for us in a new age of climate change, when the relationship between physical climates and cultural, political and literary atmospheres is once again being transformed.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 28 Jun 2018). , Introduction: An ecophilology of atmosphere -- Atmospheric romanticism -- Atmospheric mediation -- Romantic meteorology -- Atmospheric aesthetics -- In the breathing chamber: "lines written a few miles above" -- Conclusion: Romantic poetry after climate change.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9781108424950
    Language: English
    Subjects: English Studies
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Frankfurt a.M. : Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
    UID:
    almahu_9948664399702882
    Format: 1 online resource (503 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9783653026375
    Series Statement: Warsaw Studies in English Language and Literature 15
    Content: This is a volume of selected papers presented at the International Conference on Historical English Word-Formation and Semantics held in Warsaw on 10-11 December 2011 and organized by the School of English at the Warsaw Division of the University of Social Sciences in Łódź. The conference was attended by scholars from Poland, USA, Germany, Austria, Belgium, France, Japan, Italy, Ukraine and Slovakia. Their papers covered a wide range of topics concerning the area of word formation and semantics in Old and Middle English.
    Note: Contents: Dieter Kastovsky: English prefixation: A historical sketch – D. Gary Miller: On the history and analysis of V-P nouns – Grzegorz A. Kleparski: Historical semantics: A sketch on new categories and types of semantic change – Hans Sauer: Reginald Pecock and his vocabulary: A preliminary sketch – Magdalena Bator: Verbs of cooking in Middle English: fry, roast and bake – Michael Bilynsky: Unanalysable verb-related coinages as reflected in the OED textual prototypes – Olga Chupryna: Old English sǣl ‘time’: Metaphor and metonymy in word and text – Gaye Çinkiliç/Helmut Weiß: Historical word formation in German. On the interpretation of N-N compounds – Ewa Ciszek: Middle English decline of the Old English word lēode: A case study of the two manuscripts of Laʒamon’s Brut – Xavier Dekeyser: Loss of the prototypical meaning related to lexical borrowing. The battle of (near) synonyms: A case study – Bożena Duda: From portcwene to fille de joie: On etymology and the word-formation processes behind the historical lexical representations in the category FALLEN WOMAN in English – Radosław Dylewski: The first years of dude. What else can early American newspapers and the COHA tell us about its early meanings and usages? – Camiel Hamans: Historical word-formation caught in the present – changes in modern usage – Robert Kiełtyka: Sniff danger and wietrzyć podstęp: On the categorization of verbal zoosemy – Małgorzata Kłos: Old English poetic diction and the language of death: Circumlocutory terms denoting the sense ‘die’ in Anglo-Saxon poetry – Beata Kopecka: Whatever the weather - on semantic change and word-formation processes – Anya Kursova: Folk-etymologies: On the way to improving naturalness – Olivier Simonin: The semantics of noun postmodifying to-infinitives in Old English – Marta Sylwanowicz: Names of medicines in Early Modern English medical texts (1500-1700) – Agnieska Wawrzyniak: Metaphors of darkness in The Canterbury Tales – Jerzy Wełna: The regional aspects of the distribution of nouns in -ling in Middle English.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783631634158
    Language: English
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  • 8
    UID:
    almahu_9948665303302882
    Format: 1 online resource (395 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9783035302004
    Series Statement: Romanticism and after in France / Le Romantisme et après en France 20
    Content: This volume commemorates the work of Malcolm Bowie, who died in 2007. It includes selected papers drawn from the conference held in his memory at the Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies, University of London, in May 2008, inspired by his work in nineteenth- and twentieth-century French literature. Malcolm Bowie was instrumental in shaping French studies in the United Kingdom into the interdisciplinary field it now is. The contributions to this collection are grouped around Bowie’s principal interests and specialisms: poetry, Proust, theory, visual art and music. The book is, however, more than a memorial to Malcolm Bowie’s work and legacy. In its inclusion of work by established and eminent members of the academic profession as well as new and emerging scholars, it is also a showcase for cutting-edge work in French studies in the United Kingdom and beyond.
    Note: Contents: Michael Worton: Introduction – Marina Warner: Strange Tongues: Mallarmé in the English Nursery, Beckett in Babel – Michael Sheringham: Pierre Alferi and the Poetics of the Dissolve: Film and Visual Media in Sentimentale Journée – Adam Watt: ‘Langage tangage’: Poetic Instability in Mallarmé, Valéry and Leiris – Natasha Grigorian: Hercules as the Monstrous Hero: The Interplay of Shifting Meanings in Gustave Moreau and José-Maria de Heredia – Katherine Lunn-Rockliffe: Victor Hugo’s Changing Constellations in ‘À la fenêtre pendant la nuit’ – Patrick O’Donovan: The Time of Vigny – Hugues Azérad: Poets as Jugglers of the Concrete: Édouard Glissant, Pierre Reverdy and Modernist Aesthetics – Joseph Acquisto: Cross-referencing Bowie: Layers, Networks and Music in Mallarmé and Proust – Carol J. Murphy: Reading Bowie Reading Proust – Akane Kawakami: When the Unfamiliar becomes Familiar…? Proust, Planes and Modernity – Kathy McIlvenny: Proust and the Indirections of Desire: Third-Party Involvement in the Love Relationships of À la Recherche du temps perdu – Gabrielle Townsend: Dissolving the Familiar: Le Port de Carquethuit and Metaphor – Áine Larkin: Suspect Surfaces and Depths: Radiographic Images, Perception and Memory – Kathrin Yacavone: The ‘Scattered’ Proust: On Barthes’s Reading of the Recherche – Alison Finch: The French Concept of ‘Influence’ – Henriette Korthals Altes: The Sublime Revisited: Theory as Fiction in the Essays of Pascal Quignard – Philip Dravers: Lituraterre: Between Writing and Speech and the Discourse of a Master – Mary Orr: Epitaphs on Stones: Louis Bouilhet’s Les Fossiles and the Afterlife of Memory – Johanna Malt: Sartre, Lacan and the Surface of Modern Sculpture – Roland-François Lack: ‘Echoes of the Horn’: Intertextual Variations on Vigny – Timothy Mathews: Afterword.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783034301084
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 9
    UID:
    almahu_9948664284002882
    Format: 1 online resource (302 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9783653030273
    Series Statement: Studies in English Medieval Language and Literature 38
    Content: The fourteen essays presented here discuss the development of English during the Middle English period: how the language developed from Old English, linguistic innovations, and the loss and abandonment of certain words and constructions. A common theme is variation and variability – dialectal, social, temporal, stylistic and idiolectal – with much work fitting under the heading of historical pragmatics. Some of the essays also shed light on everyday life, customs, culture and religious practices during the period. Collectively, the essays make it clear that searchable computerized corpora have become indispensible tools of the discipline, with several contributors describing new corpora created to their own specifications.
    Note: Contents: Richard Dance/Laura Wright: Introduction – Javier Calle Martin/David Moreno Olalla: Body of evidence: Middle English annotated corpora and dialect atlases – Julia Fernández Cuesta/Luisa García García/J. Gabriel Amores Carredano: Compilation of an electronic corpus of northern English texts from Old to Early Modern English – Gabriella Mazzon: Now what? The analysis of Middle English discourse markers and advances in historical dialogue studies – Hans-Jürgen Diller: Ssoong on Ifaluk, ANGER and WRATH in Middle English: Historical Semantics as bridge-builder – Cynthia Allen: The Poss(essive) Det(erminer) construction in Early Middle English writings – Ewa Ciszek: The suffix -ish: Its semantic development and productivity in Middle English – María José Carrillo-Linares/Edurne Garrido-Anes: Lexical variation in late Middle English: Selection and deselection – Anna Wojtyś: The prefix y-: grammatical marker or meaningless appendage? A contrastive analysis of selected manuscripts of Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales – Joanna Esquibel: Gratter cost, more grat zenne, þe more gratter torment: Comparison in Dan Michel’s Ayenbite of Inwyt – Carole Hough: Names in Chaucer’s Nun’s Priest’s Tale – Nils-Lennart Johannesson: «Rihht alls an hunnte takeþþ der./Wiþþ hise ʒæpe racchess»: Hunting as a metaphor for proselytizing in the Ormulum – Mayumi Taguchi: Devotional terms and the use of the Bible in Nicholas Love’s Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ – Nicolay Yakovlev: Metre and punctuation in the Caligula manuscript of Laʒamon’s Brut – Ad Putter: A prototype theory of metrical stress: Lexical categories and ictus in Langland, the Gawain-poet and other alliterative poets.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783631628751
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 10
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge : Open Book Publishers
    UID:
    gbv_1686952708
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (xxxvi, 215 pages)
    ISBN: 1906924589 , 1906924562 , 1906924570 , 9781906924584 , 9781906924560 , 9781906924577
    Content: "This collection brings together for the first time select works in English by the major Swedish modernist poet and critic Göran Printz-Påhlson. It was Printz-Påhlson who introduced poetic modernism to Scandinavia, and his essays and poems delve deeply into English, American, and continental modernist traditions. As well as Letters of Blood, the collection includes the full text of "The Words of the Tribe", a major statement on modern poetics, in which Printz-Påhlson explores the significance of primitivism in Romanticism and Modernism, and the nature of metaphor and literary materialism. The collection also includes essays on style, irony, realism, and the relationship between historical drama and historical fiction, as well as studies of American poetry. Printz-Påhlson's poetry in English continues to explore these themes by different, often surprisingly innovative, means."--Publisher's description
    Content: Foreword /Elinor Shaffer --Inbetween: Locating Göran Printz-Påhlson /Robert Archambeau --The Meaning of Place: Some Notes on Göran Printz-Påhlson /Lars-Håkan Svensson --The Words of the Tribe: Primitivism, Reductionism, and Materialism in Modern Poetics --1.Linguistic Primitivism in Modernism and Romanticism --2.Linguistic Reductionism in Poetry Criticism --3.The Material Word: From Imagism to New Criticism to Intertextualism --4.The Polity of Metaphor and the Purity of Diction --Other Prose --Style, Irony, Metaphor and Meaning --Realism as Negation --Historical Drama and Historical Fiction: The Example of Stindberg --The Canon of Literary Modernism: A Note on Abstraction in the Poetry of Erik Lindegren --The Tradition of Contemporary Swedish Poetry --Kierkegaard the Poet --Surface and Accident: John Ashbery --The Voyages of John Matthias --Letters of Blood: Poems --Part 1:My Interview with I.A. Richards --Generation --Televisiondreamroutines --The Longest-Running Show on Television --The Enormous Comics --Poem Unnamed --Botchuana --Part 2:Aelius Lamia: Tanka for Robert Hass --Odradek --Turning Machine --Broendal --Two Prose Poems --Sir Charles Babbage Returns to Trinity College --Man-Made Monster Surreptitiously Regarding Idyllic Scene --Joe Hill in Prison --Remember the Rosenbergs --When Beaumont and Tocqueville First Visited Sing-Sing --Three Baroque Elegies from Gradiva --Part 3:Comedians --Songs of Dock Boggs --In the Style of Scott Skinner --Acrobats on the Radio --To John at Summer Solstice, Before His Return --Part 4:The Green-Ey'd Monster --Select Bibliography --A Note on the Text.
    Note: Includes bibliographical references
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781906924560
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Printz-Påhlson, Göran, 1931-2006 Letters of blood and other works in English [S.l.] : Open Book Publishers, 2011 ISBN 9781906924560
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books ; Electronic books
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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