Bad Books reconstructs how the eighteenth-century French author Nicolas-Edme Retif de la Bretonne and his writings were at the forefront of the development of modern conceptions of sexuality and pornography. Although certain details are well known (for example, that Retif s 1769 treatise on prostitution, Le Pornographe, is the work from which the term pornography is derived, or that he was an avid foot and shoe fetishist), much of this story has been obscured and even forgotten including how the author actively worked to define the category of obscenity and the modern pornographic genre, and how he coined the psycho-sexual term fetish and played a central role in the formation of theories of sexual fetishism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Thus this book is also about literary history and how it is written: it explores how Retif, perceived as a bad author in both senses of the term, and his contributions were glossed over or condemned, such that the originality of his texts has still not been fully established. Placing Retif s novels and short stories in dialogue with his autobiographical writings as well as with contemporary and modern critical commentaries, the various chapters of the book examine the author s repeated testing of the limits of censorship to define and redefine the boundaries of obscenity; his advancement of the modern form and definition of pornography through a focus on intimacy and (female) pleasure; his detailed narrative explorations of foot and shoe fetishisms that were later appropriated by the sexologists; and his development of theories of eugenics and reproduction in his utopian science fiction. The history of Retif s texts and their reception reveals an evolution in the criteria of what is considered to be good or worthy literature a category once defined purely on moral grounds that is increasingly seen in cultural terms. Bad Books corroborates the recent resurgence of interest in the author by showing the import of his texts, which not only designate a number of firsts in the histories of sexuality and pornography, but which also illuminate some of the defining moments in the history of French literary studies."
When one considers this reception pattern , it appears almost ironic how both South African and international journalists have struggled to decipher Coetzee's initials , 527 526 Michael Morris , “ Celebrated author a man of few words .
Extensive treatments of famous names are balanced by discussions of non-canonical and non-literary work. Thematic rather than chronological, the book places its texts in a variety of social, imaginary, and intellectual contexts.
James T. Farrell: The Revolutionary Socialist Years
Drawing upon recent research, Shaw traces the pattern from Romanticism to the Boom and beyond and shows how presumptions about narrative and reality have undergone radical alterations.
書中的秘境
書中的祕境
Chávez debe morir como un perro , lo merece , con el perdón de esos nobles animales CARLOS ANDRÉS PÉREZ , El Nacional , 25/7/2004 , A / 4 En una entrevista concedida a los periodistas Edgar Alfonzo Sierra y Rubén Wisotzki el 4 de marzo ...
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R. Howard Bloch makes the point that this spirit of the canso allies it with newly developing legal mechanisms such as ... Here is the opening to Guilhem IX , the “ Coms de Peiteus's ” vida : “ Lo coms de Peitieus si fo uns dels majors ...
Of particular note among these critics are Phyllis Frus's The Politics and Poetics of Journalistic Narrative; Dorrit Cohn's The Distinction of Fiction; Shelley Fisher Fishkin's From Fact to Fiction: Journalism and Imaginative Writing; ...