The life of a human community rests on common experience. Yet in modem life there is an experience common to all that threatens the very basis of community -- the experience of exile. No one in the modem world has been spared the encounter with homelessness. Refugees and fugitives, the disillusioned and disenfranchised grow in number every day. Why does it happen? What does it mean? And how are we implicated? David Patterson responds to these and related questions by examining exile, a primary motif in Russian thought over the last century and a half. By "exile" he means not only a form of punishment but an existential condition. Drawing on texts by such familiar figures as Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Solzhenitsyn, and Brodsky, as well as less thoroughly examined figures, including Florensky, Shestov, Tertz, and Gendelev, Patterson moves beyond the political and geographical fact of exile to explore its spiritual, metaphysical, and linguistic aspects. Thus he pursues the connections between exile and identity, identity and meaning, meaning and language. Patterson shows that the problem of meaning in human life is a problem of homelessness, that the effort to return from exile is an effort to return meaning to the word, and that the exile of the word is an exile of the human being. By making heard voices from the Russian wilderness, Patterson makes visible the wilderness of the world.
Red Panda and Moon Bear are the defenders of their community!
After growing up in Washington, D.C. and Texas, and then attending Columbia University in New York, Belén Fernández ended up in a state of self-imposed exile from the United States.
The swooning Victorian ladies and the 1950s housewives genuinely needed to be liberated.
David Wolfe is a former homicide prosecutor who is planning to run for Congress.
Rather than execute her only son, the First Admiral instead decides to exile them, flinging four million dissidents and rebels through a one-shot wormhole to the other end of the galaxy.
And their home is nothing like she'd expected, like nothing the Freds had prepared them for." -- Back cover
She couldn't believe she'd been deported. It had to be a mistake. The Exile is a heart-wrenching love story that crosses cultures and borders, shedding light on the challenges faced by Hispanic immigrants living in the United States.
One of the most intriguing and engaging voices in contemporary Christianity is that of the Irish poet, Pádraig Ó Tuama and this is his first, long-awaited poetry collection.
... On Earth as in Heaven: The Restoration of Sacred Space and Sacred Time in the Book of Jubilees (Brill, 2004). His latest book is Bacchius Iudaeus: A Denarius Commemorating Pompey's Victory over Judea (Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2015).
From Robinson Crusoe to Nelson Mandela, the Mayflower Pilgrims to the Ayatollah Khomeini, exiles of all types and eras recount their experiences in a wide variety of sources, from police records to poetry to diaries. UP.