43 research outputs found

    The lure of postwar London:networks of people, print and organisations

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    Gothic Revival Architecture Before Horace Walpole's Strawberry Hill

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    The Gothic Revival is generally considered to have begun in eighteenth-century Britain with the construction of Horace Walpole’s villa, Strawberry Hill, Twickenham, in the late 1740s. As this chapter demonstrates, however, Strawberry Hill is in no way the first building, domestic or otherwise, to have recreated, even superficially, some aspect of the form and ornamental style of medieval architecture. Earlier architects who, albeit often combining it with Classicism, worked in the Gothic style include Sir Christopher Wren, Nicholas Hawksmoor, William Kent and Batty Langley, aspects of whose works are explored here. While not an exhaustive survey of pre-1750 Gothic Revival design, the examples considered in this chapter reveal how seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Gothic emerged and evolved over the course of different architects’ careers, and how, by the time that Walpole came to create his own Gothic ‘castle’, there was already in existence in Britain a sustained Gothic Revivalist tradition

    'Vernacular Voices: Black British Poetry'

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    ABSTRACT Black British poetry is the province of experimenting with voice and recording rhythms beyond the iambic pentameter. Not only in performance poetry and through the spoken word, but also on the page, black British poetry constitutes and preserves a sound archive of distinct linguistic varieties. In Slave Song (1984) and Coolie Odyssey (1988), David Dabydeen employs a form of Guyanese Creole in order to linguistically render and thus commemorate the experience of slaves and indentured labourers, respectively, with the earlier collection providing annotated translations into Standard English. James Berry, Louise Bennett, and Valerie Bloom adapt Jamaican Patois to celebrate Jamaican folk culture and at times to represent and record experiences and linguistic interactions in the postcolonial metropolis. Grace Nichols and John Agard use modified forms of Guyanese Creole, with Nichols frequently constructing gendered voices whilst Agard often celebrates linguistic playfulness. The borders between linguistic varieties are by no means absolute or static, as the emergence and marked growth of ‘London Jamaican’ (Mark Sebba) indicates. Asian British writer Daljit Nagra takes liberties with English for different reasons. Rather than having recourse to established Creole languages, and blending them with Standard English, his heteroglot poems frequently emulate ‘Punglish’, the English of migrants whose first language is Punjabi. Whilst it is the language prestige of London Jamaican that has been significantly enhanced since the 1990s, a fact not only confirmed by linguistic research but also by its transethnic uses both in the streets and on the page, Nagra’s substantial success and the mainstream attention he receives also indicate the clout of vernacular voices in poetry. They have the potential to connect with oral traditions and cultural memories, to record linguistic varieties, and to endow ‘street cred’ to authors and texts. In this chapter, these double-voiced poetic languages are also read as signs of resistance against residual monologic ideologies of Englishness. © Book proposal (02/2016): The Cambridge History of Black and Asian British Writing p. 27 of 4

    Pensamentos e sentimentos sobre os males da escravidĂŁo

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    The text presented here was translated from the original English: "Thoughts and Sentiments on the Evil of Slavery", respectfully presented to the people of Britain by Ottobah Cugoano, a native of Africa.The text presented here was translated from the original English: "Thoughts and Sentiments on the Evil of Slavery", respectfully presented to the people of Britain by Ottobah Cugoano, a native of Africa.O texto aqui apresentado foi traduzido do original em inglĂȘs: "Thoughts and Sentiments on the Evil of Slavery" (Pensamentos e sentimentos sobre os males do trĂĄfico), respeitosamente apresentado aos habitantes da GrĂŁ-Bretanha, por Ottobah Cugoano, um nativo da África

    La Révolution française et l'abolition de l'esclavage ; 10-11. La révolte des Noirs et des Créoles. 10.1

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    Comprend : RĂ©flexion sur la traite et l'esclavage des nĂšgresContient une table des matiĂšre
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