22 research outputs found

    Amours de Sami, roman égyptien, suivi de dix contes

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    L'amour par delà l'inconnu : roman / Mahmoud Teymour

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    Collection : Les maîtres étrangersContient une table des matièresAvec mode text

    The spatial drama of hope and desire in contemporary New York City literature

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    Changing Culture : The Contribution of European Immigrants to New York City Literature, 1870–1940

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    This comprehensive look at the New York literature of European immigrants invites us to rethink in aesthetic terms the interaction between the psychic and the socio-historical. A closer look at the literary dimension of the Irish, German, Scandinavian and Dutch, Italian, Jewish, Polish, Greek, and other components of New York raises the question of the specificity whereby immigrant authors, or second-generation authors with a strong, obvious immigrant background, related to, and portrayed a city, and a city like no other such as New York. Mass immigration meant the almost perfect concentration in the New York of that period of the three classical dramatic unities of time, place and action, thus giving evidence to an epochal change that was at the same time external and internal, socio-political and existential, and whose effects are palpably present in the immigrants\u2019 literature. The massive global inflows from Castle Garden and Ellis Island happened because, and coincided with, a tumultuous industrial, economic and capitalist thrust, and caused a gigantic urban growth. To be sure, this was a phenomenon of obviously global dimensions, which concurred and vied with the aggressive nationalistic mind-set of the time and became an active element of a push and pull dynamic. Indeed, \u2018in a multitude of ways each immigrant culture articulated group identity as national identity\u2019

    New and old Amsterdam in Twenty-First Century fiction

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    This chapter examines the evocation of New Amsterdam within contemporary novels of New York. You would think that, considering its humble, yet extraordinary beginnings as New Amsterdam, New York’s earliest history as a multicultural, multilingual Dutch settlement might have generated its own literature. However, this origin point is largely absent within American literary history. By assessing how New York’s Dutch origins have been featured in contemporary literature, this chapter examines Joseph O’Neill’s Netherland, Teju Cole’s Open City and Donna Tartt’s The Goldfinch. These novels are examined for how New Amsterdam is set as the scene for New York’s present and its future

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    Popular poetry in the post-classical period, 1150–1850

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    The essay and debate ( al-risāla

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    Sīrat‘ Antar ibn Shaddād

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