Reading and Movie List – Spain
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Writers Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Monica Ali Isabel Allende Martin Amis Kurt Andersen K
Writers Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Monica Ali Isabel Allende Martin Amis Kurt Andersen K. A. Applegate Jeffrey Archer Diana Athill Paul Auster Wasi Ahmed Victoria Aveyard Kevin Baker Mark Allen Baker Nicholson Baker Iain Banks Russell Banks Julian Barnes Andrea Barrett Max Barry Sebastian Barry Louis Bayard Peter Behrens Elizabeth Berg Wendell Berry Maeve Binchy Dustin Lance Black Holly Black Amy Bloom Chris Bohjalian Roberto Bolano S. J. Bolton William Boyd T. C. Boyle John Boyne Paula Brackston Adam Braver Libba Bray Alan Brennert Andre Brink Max Brooks Dan Brown Don Brown www.downloadexcelfiles.com Christopher Buckley John Burdett James Lee Burke Augusten Burroughs A. S. Byatt Bhalchandra Nemade Peter Cameron W. Bruce Cameron Jacqueline Carey Peter Carey Ron Carlson Stephen L. Carter Eleanor Catton Michael Chabon Diane Chamberlain Jung Chang Kate Christensen Dan Chaon Kelly Cherry Tracy Chevalier Noam Chomsky Tom Clancy Cassandra Clare Susanna Clarke Chris Cleave Ernest Cline Harlan Coben Paulo Coelho J. M. Coetzee Eoin Colfer Suzanne Collins Michael Connelly Pat Conroy Claire Cook Bernard Cornwell Douglas Coupland Michael Cox Jim Crace Michael Crichton Justin Cronin John Crowley Clive Cussler Fred D'Aguiar www.downloadexcelfiles.com Sandra Dallas Edwidge Danticat Kathryn Davis Richard Dawkins Jonathan Dee Frank Delaney Charles de Lint Tatiana de Rosnay Kiran Desai Pete Dexter Anita Diamant Junot Diaz Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni E. L. Doctorow Ivan Doig Stephen R. Donaldson Sara Donati Jennifer Donnelly Emma Donoghue Keith Donohue Roddy Doyle Margaret Drabble Dinesh D'Souza John Dufresne Sarah Dunant Helen Dunmore Mark Dunn James Dashner Elisabetta Dami Jennifer Egan Dave Eggers Tan Twan Eng Louise Erdrich Eugene Dubois Diana Evans Percival Everett J. -
Samuel Beckett's Peristaltic Modernism, 1932-1958 Adam
‘FIRST DIRTY, THEN MAKE CLEAN’: SAMUEL BECKETT’S PERISTALTIC MODERNISM, 1932-1958 ADAM MICHAEL WINSTANLEY PhD THE UNIVERSITY OF YORK DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH AND RELATED LITERATURE MARCH 2013 1 ABSTRACT Drawing together a number of different recent approaches to Samuel Beckett’s studies, this thesis examines the convulsive narrative trajectories of Beckett’s prose works from Dream of Fair to Middling Women (1931-2) to The Unnamable (1958) in relation to the disorganised muscular contractions of peristalsis. Peristalsis is understood here, however, not merely as a digestive process, as the ‘propulsive movement of the gastrointestinal tract and other tubular organs’, but as the ‘coordinated waves of contraction and relaxation of the circular muscle’ (OED). Accordingly, this thesis reconciles a number of recent approaches to Beckett studies by combining textual, phenomenological and cultural concerns with a detailed account of Beckett’s own familiarity with early twentieth-century medical and psychoanalytical discourses. It examines the extent to which these discourses find a parallel in his work’s corporeal conception of the linguistic and narrative process, where the convolutions, disavowals and disjunctions that function at the level of narrative and syntax are persistently equated with medical ailments, autonomous reflexes and bodily emissions. Tracing this interest to his early work, the first chapter focuses upon the masturbatory trope of ‘dehiscence’ in Dream of Fair to Middling Women, while the second examines cardiovascular complaints in Murphy (1935-6). The third chapter considers the role that linguistic constipation plays in Watt (1941-5), while the fourth chapter focuses upon peristalsis and rumination in Molloy (1947). The penultimate chapter examines the significance of epilepsy, dilation and parturition in the ‘throes’ that dominate Malone Dies (1954-5), whereas the final chapter evaluates the significance of contamination and respiration in The Unnamable (1957-8). -
El Cid and the Circumfixion of Cinematic History: Stereotypology/ Phantomimesis/ Cryptomorphoses
9780230601253ts04.qxd 03/11/2010 08:03 AM Page 75 Chapter 2 The Passion of El Cid and the Circumfixion of Cinematic History: Stereotypology/ Phantomimesis/ Cryptomorphoses I started with the final scene. This lifeless knight who is strapped into the saddle of his horse ...it’s an inspirational scene. The film flowed from this source. —Anthony Mann, “Conversation with Anthony Man,” Framework 15/16/27 (Summer 1981), 191 In order, therefore, to find an analogy, we must take flight into the misty realm of religion. —Karl Marx, Capital, 165 It is precisely visions of the frenzy of destruction, in which all earthly things col- lapse into a heap of ruins, which reveal the limit set upon allegorical contempla- tion, rather than its ideal quality. The bleak confusion of Golgotha, which can be recognized as the schema underlying the engravings and descriptions of the [Baroque] period, is not just a symbol of the desolation of human existence. In it transitoriness is not signified or allegorically represented, so much as, in its own significance, displayed as allegory. As the allegory of resurrection. —Walter Benjamin, The Origin of German Tragic Drama, 232 The allegorical form appears purely mechanical, an abstraction whose original meaning is even more devoid of substance than its “phantom proxy” the allegor- ical representative; it is an immaterial shape that represents a sheer phantom devoid of shape and substance. —Paul de Man, Blindness and Insight, 191–92 Destiny Rides Again The medieval film epic El Cid is widely regarded as a liberal film about the Cold War, in favor of détente, and in support of civil rights and racial 9780230601253ts04.qxd 03/11/2010 08:03 AM Page 76 76 Medieval and Early Modern Film and Media equality in the United States.2 This reading of the film depends on binary oppositions between good and bad Arabs, and good and bad kings, with El Cid as a bourgeois male subject who puts common good above duty. -
Martin Ritt 19:00 PROVIDENCE - Alain Resnais 21:00 the FAN - Ed Bianchi
Domingo 9 17:00 THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD - Martin Ritt 19:00 PROVIDENCE - Alain Resnais 21:00 THE FAN - Ed Bianchi Lunes 10 CGAC 17:00 L’AVEU - Constantin Costa-Gavras 19:30 L’AMOUR À MORT - Alain Resnais 21:15 THE RAIN PEOPLE - Francis Ford Coppola Martes 11 17:00 A DANDY IN ASPIC - Anthony Mann, Laurence Harvey 19:00 THE DEADLY AFFAIR - Sidney Lumet 21:00 DER HIMMEL ÜBER BERLIN - Wim Wenders Miércoles 12 16:30 SECHSE KOMMEN DURCH DIE WELT - Rainer Simon 18:00 TILL EULENSPIEGEL - Rainer Simon 19:45 JADUP UND BOEL - Rainer Simon 21:30 DIE FRAU UND DER FREMDE - Rainer Simon Jueves 13 17:45 WENGLER & SÖHNE, EINE LEGENDE - Rainer Simon 19:30 DER FALL Ö - Rainer Simon 21:15 WORK IN PROGRESS: CORTOMETRAJES DE MARCOS NINE - Marcos Nine Viernes 14 16:00 FÜNF PATRONENHÜLSEN - Frank Beyer 17:30 NACKT UNTER WÖLFEN - Frank Beyer 19:45 KARBID UND SAUERAMPFER - Frank Beyer 21:15 JAKOB, DER LÜGNER - Frank Beyer 23:00 DER VERDACHT - Frank Beyer Miércoles 19 21:30 DER TUNNEL - Roland Suso Richter Jueves 20 16:00 CARLOS - Olivier Assayas 21:45 DIE STILLE NACH DEM SCHUSS - Volker Schlöndorff Venres 21 16:00 8MM-KO ERREPIDEA - Tximino Kolektiv (Ander Parody, Pablo Maraví, Itxaso Koto, Mikel Armendáriz) 17:00 PROXECTO NIMBOS (SELECCIÓN DE CORTOMETRAJES) - Varios autores 17:45 WORK IN PROGRESS: O LUGAR DOS AVÓS - Víctor Hugo Seoane 20:15 EL CORRAL Y EL VIENTO - Miguel Hilari 21:15 OUROBOROS - Carlos Rivero, Alonso Valbuena Sábado 22 17:00 VIDEOCREACIÓNS - Olalla Castro 18:30 A HISTÓRIA DE UM ERRO - Joana Barros 20:15 TRUE ROMANCE. -
Claude Simon: the Artist As Orion
Claude Simon: The Artist as Orion 1blind Orion hungry for the morn1 S.W. Sykes Thesis submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Glasgow 1973 ProQuest Number: 11017972 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a com plete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. uest ProQuest 11017972 Published by ProQuest LLC(2018). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States C ode Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC. 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106- 1346 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS My thanks are due to Dr Stanley Jones, of the French Department in the University of Glasgow, for the interest shown and advice given during the supervision of this thesis; to the Staff of Glasgow University Library; and to / A M. Jerome Lindon, who allowed me to study material kept in the offices of Editions de Minuit. TABLE OF CONTENTS SUMMARY INTRODUCTION CHAPTER I Prolegomena to Le Vent Early Writings 19^5-5^ CHAPTER II Chaos and the Semblance of Order Le Vent 1957 CHAPTER III The Presence of the Past: L 'Herbe 1958 CHAPTER IV The Assassination of Time: La Route des Flandres i960 CHAPTER V A Dream of Revolution:. Le Palace 1962 CHAPTER VI •A pattern of timeless moments': Histoire 1967 -
Movie Museum FEBRUARY 2009 COMING ATTRACTIONS
Movie Museum FEBRUARY 2009 COMING ATTRACTIONS THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY VICKY CRISTINA IN BRUGES BOTTLE SHOCK ARSENIC AND IN BRUGES BARCELONA (2008-UK/Belgium) (2008) OLD LACE (2008-UK/Belgium) (2008-Spain/US) in widescreen in widescreen in widescreen in Catalan/English/Spanish w/ (1944) with Chris Pine, Alan with Cary Grant, Josephine English subtitles in widescreen with Colin Farrell, Brendan with Colin Farrell, Brendan Hull, Jean Adair, Raymond with Rebecca Hall, Scarlett Gleeson, Ralph Fiennes, Rickman, Bill Pullman, Gleeson, Ralph Fiennes, Johansson, Javier Bardem, Clémence Poésy, Eric Godon, Rachael Taylor, Freddy Massey, Peter Lorre, Priscilla Clémence Poésy, Eric Godon, Penelopé Cruz, Chris Ciarán Hinds. Rodriguez, Dennis Farina. Lane, John Alexander, Jack Ciarán Hinds. Messina, Patricia Clarkson. Carson, John Ridgely. Written and Directed by Written and Directed by Directed and Co-written by Written and Directed by Woody Allen. Martin McDonagh. Randall Miller. Directed by Martin McDonagh. Frank Capra. 12:30, 2:30, 4:30, 6:30 12:30, 2:30, 4:30, 6:30 12:30, 2:30, 4:30, 6:30 12:30, 2:30, 4:30, 6:30 & 8:30pm 5 & 8:30pm 6 & 8:30pm 7 12:30, 3, 5:30 & 8pm 8 & 8:30pm 9 Lincoln's 200th Birthday THE VISITOR Valentine's Day THE VISITOR Presidents' Day 2 for 1 YOUNG MR. LINCOLN (2007) OUT OF AFRICA (2007) THE TALL TARGET (1951) (1939) in widescreen (1985) in widescreen with Dick Powell, Paula Raymond, Adolphe Menjou. with Henry Fonda, Alice with Richard Jenkins, Haaz in widescreen with Richard Jenkins, Haaz Directed by Anthony Mann. -
Dvds - Now on DVD, Glenda Farrell As Torchy Blane - Nytimes.Com 5/10/10 3:08 PM
DVDs - Now on DVD, Glenda Farrell as Torchy Blane - NYTimes.com 5/10/10 3:08 PM Welcome to TimesPeople TimesPeople recommended: Sex & Drugs & the Spill 3:08Recommend PM Get Started HOME PAGE TODAY'S PAPER VIDEO MOST POPULAR TIMES TOPICS Get Home Delivery Log In Register Now Search All NYTimes.com DVD WORLD U.S. N.Y. / REGION BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY SCIENCE HEALTH SPORTS OPINION ARTS STYLE TRAVEL JOBS REAL ESTATE AUTOS Search Movies, People and Showtimes by ZIP Code More in Movies » In Theaters The Critics' On DVD Tickets & Trailers Carpetbagger Picks Showtimes DVDS B-Movie Newshound: Hello, Big Boy, Get Me Rewrite! Warner Home Video Glenda Farrell with Tom Kennedy, left, and Barton MacLane in “Torchy Blane in Chinatown” (1939). By DAVE KEHR Published: May 7, 2010 SIGN IN TO RECOMMEND The Torchy Blane Collection TWITTER Enlarge This Image “B movie” is now SIGN IN TO E- a term routinely MAIL applied to PRINT essentially any SHARE low-budget, vaguely disreputable genre film. But it used to mean something quite specific. During the Great Depression MOST POPULAR exhibitors began offering double E-MAILED BLOGGED SEARCHED VIEWED MOVIES features in the hope of luring back their diminished audience. The 1. 10 Days in a Carry-On program would consist of an A picture, 2. Tell-All Generation Learns to Keep Things Offline with stars, conspicuous production 3. The Moral Life of Babies Shout! Factory and New Horizons Pictures 4. Paul Krugman: Sex & Drugs & the Spill Youth in revolt: P. J. Soles, center, values and a running time of 80 5. -
Have Gun, Will Travel: the Myth of the Frontier in the Hollywood Western John Springhall
Feature Have gun, will travel: The myth of the frontier in the Hollywood Western John Springhall Newspaper editor (bit player): ‘This is the West, sir. When the legend becomes fact, we print the legend’. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (dir. John Ford, 1962). Gil Westrum (Randolph Scott): ‘You know what’s on the back of a poor man when he dies? The clothes of pride. And they are not a bit warmer to him dead than they were when he was alive. Is that all you want, Steve?’ Steve Judd (Joel McCrea): ‘All I want is to enter my house justified’. Ride the High Country [a.k.a. Guns in the Afternoon] (dir. Sam Peckinpah, 1962)> J. W. Grant (Ralph Bellamy): ‘You bastard!’ Henry ‘Rico’ Fardan (Lee Marvin): ‘Yes, sir. In my case an accident of birth. But you, you’re a self-made man.’ The Professionals (dir. Richard Brooks, 1966).1 he Western movies that from Taround 1910 until the 1960s made up at least a fifth of all the American film titles on general release signified Lee Marvin, Lee Van Cleef, John Wayne and Strother Martin on the set of The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance escapist entertainment for British directed and produced by John Ford. audiences: an alluring vision of vast © Sunset Boulevard/Corbis open spaces, of cowboys on horseback outlined against an imposing landscape. For Americans themselves, the Western a schoolboy in the 1950s, the Western believed that the western frontier was signified their own turbulent frontier has an undeniable appeal, allowing the closing or had already closed – as the history west of the Mississippi in the cinemagoer to interrogate, from youth U. -
Inmedia, 3 | 2013, « Cinema and Marketing » [Online], Online Since 22 April 2013, Connection on 22 September 2020
InMedia The French Journal of Media Studies 3 | 2013 Cinema and Marketing Electronic version URL: http://journals.openedition.org/inmedia/524 DOI: 10.4000/inmedia.524 ISSN: 2259-4728 Publisher Center for Research on the English-Speaking World (CREW) Electronic reference InMedia, 3 | 2013, « Cinema and Marketing » [Online], Online since 22 April 2013, connection on 22 September 2020. URL : http://journals.openedition.org/inmedia/524 ; DOI : https://doi.org/10.4000/ inmedia.524 This text was automatically generated on 22 September 2020. © InMedia 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Cinema and Marketing When Cultural Demands Meet Industrial Practices Cinema and Marketing: When Cultural Demands Meet Industrial Practices Nathalie Dupont and Joël Augros Jerry Pickman: “The Picture Worked.” Reminiscences of a Hollywood publicist Sheldon Hall “To prevent the present heat from dissipating”: Stanley Kubrick and the Marketing of Dr. Strangelove (1964) Peter Krämer Targeting American Women: Movie Marketing, Genre History, and the Hollywood Women- in-Danger Film Richard Nowell Marketing Films to the American Conservative Christians: The Case of The Chronicles of Narnia Nathalie Dupont “Paris . As You’ve Never Seen It Before!!!”: The Promotion of Hollywood Foreign Productions in the Postwar Era Daniel Steinhart The Multiple Facets of Enter the Dragon (Robert Clouse, 1973) Pierre-François Peirano Woody Allen’s French Marketing: Everyone Says Je l’aime, Or Do They? Frédérique Brisset Varia Images of the Protestants in Northern Ireland: A Cinematic Deficit or an Exclusive -
Hdnet Movies February 2012 Program Highlights
February 2012 Programming Highlights *All times listed are Eastern Standard Time *Please check the complete Program Schedule or www.hdnetmovies.com for additional films, dates and times HDNet Movies Sneak Previews – Experience exclusive broadcasts of new films before they hit theaters and DVD Tim and Eric’s Billion Dollar Movie Premieres Wednesday, 29th at 8:30pm followed by encore presentations at 10:15pm and 12:00am An all new feature film from the twisted minds of cult comedy heroes Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim ("Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job")! Tim and Eric are given a billion dollars to make a movie, but squander every dime... and the sinister Schlaaang corporation is pissed. Their lives at stake, the guys skip town in search of a way to pay the money back. When they happen upon a chance to rehabilitate a bankrupt mall full of vagrants, bizarre stores and a man-eating wolf that stalks the food court, they see dollar signs-a billion of them. Featuring cameos from Awesome Show regulars and some of the biggest names in comedy today! SPOTLIGHT FEATURES – Highlighted feature films airing throughout the month on HDNet Movies See program schedule or www.hdnetmovies.com for additional listings of dates and times Demolition Man – premieres Saturday, February 11th at 7:00pm Starring Sylvester Stallone, Wesley Snipes, Sandra Bullock. Directed by Marco Brambilla Heat – premieres Thursday, February 9th at 8:00pm Starring Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, Val Kilmer, Jon Voight. Directed by Michael Mann Mr. Brooks – premieres Thursday, February 2nd at 9:05pm Starring Kevin Costner, Demi Moore, Dane Cook, William Hurt. -
Don Quixote Miguel De Cervantes
Don Quixote Miguel de Cervantes Translated by Tom Lathrop ALMA CLASSICS AlmA ClAssiCs ltd London House 243-253 Lower Mortlake Road Richmond Surrey TW9 2LL United Kingdom www.almaclassics.com Don Quixote first published in 1605–15 This translation first published privately in US by the translator in 2005 This revised translation first published by Alma Classics Limited (pre- viously Oneworld Classics Ltd) in 2010 This new edition first published by Alma Classics Limited in 2014 Translation, Introduction and Notes © Tom Lathrop Cover design: nathanburtondesign.com Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon, CR0 4YY isbn: 978-1-84749-377-4 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or other- wise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not be resold, lent, hired out or otherwise circulated without the express prior consent of the publisher. Contents Introduction vii Don Quixote 1 First PArt 3 Part One 19 Part Two 54 Part Three 84 Part Four 182 seCond PArt 359 Notes 737 This edition is dedicated to the memory of three individuals: GERARD LEBEAU – A truly good person WALTER OLLER – A polyglot scholar and musician and DIANA FRANCES HECHTER – A life too short Introduction Miguel de Cervantes was the fourth of seven children. He was born on 29th September 1547 in Alcalá de Henares, a university town about thirty kilome- tres east of Madrid. -
René Galand, Saint-John Perse, Poet of the Universal
René Galand, Saint-John Perse, poet of the universal Saint-John Perse was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1960. Most of the French writers who have won this prize wrote in prose: Romain Rolland, Anatole France, Bergson, Roger Martin du Gard, Gide, Mauriac, Camus, Sartre, Claude Simon. Sartre declined the award: accepting it would have against all his principles. It would have meant condoning the use of literature to give legitimacy to capitalistic institutions. One must recall, however that the first Nobel Prize ever given to a French writer went to a poet: Sully-Prudhomme, who is remembered mostly for a sonnet which appeals mostly to sentimental young persons: “ Le Vase brisé ” [The broken vase]. From Sully-Prudhomme to Saint-John Perse: in the span od half a century, the literary taste of members of the Nobel Academy has remarkably advanced. Saint-John Perse, as is well know, is the pen-name of Alexis Saint-Leger Leger. From the moment when he reached a high rank in the diplomatic service, he felt he had to make a complete separation between his official personality and his literary activity. But why did he choose such an Anglo-Saxon sounding pseudonym? Different explanations have been suggested. It is possible that Alexis Leger, who believes in the prophetic power of poets, was thinking of Saint-John the Baptist whose voice was heard in the desert. Others have indicated that “Saint-John” might come from the American writer of French descent Saint-Jean de Crèvecoeur. Others still, considering the West Indian origins of the poet, have thought that it might allude to the Caribbean island of Saint-John, or that perhaps it could be the English translation of the name of San Juan, the capital of Puerto Rico.