Posted By : Shaytan |
Date : 09 Apr 2008 04:04 |
Comments : 2
John Milton "Paradise Lost & Regain'd"
PDF | ISBN not applicable | Year 1667 | 368 pages | English | 1.4MB
In Paradise Lost Milton tells the story of the fall of man, which encompasses a battle that rages across Heaven between God and Satan. Here are passion and innocence, victory and defeat, hope and despair. This is without a doubt the greatest epic poem ever written in the English language.
Posted By : Shaytan |
Date : 07 Apr 2008 01:42 |
Comments : 1
Virgil "The Aeneid"
PDF | ISBN not applicable | Year 19BC | 414 pages | English | 1.25MB
Publius Vergilius Maro was commisioned by Caesar Augustus to author a national epic for Rome. The work which Virgil composed for this purpose was the Aeneid. It is an epic poem that tells the story of a minor character from Homer's Iliad who leads a rag-tag band from the smouldering ruins of Troy in order to found a "New Troy" to the west: Rome.
Latin Epics of the New Testament: Juvencus, Sedulius, Arator
Posted By : revelation-online |
Date : 04 Apr 2008 08:56 |
Comments : 0
Roger P. H. Green, "Latin Epics of the New Testament: Juvencus, Sedulius, Arator"
Oxford University Press (2006) | English | ISBN: 0199284571 | 469 pages | PDF | 3.25 MB
Latin Epics of the New Testament is about the growth of Christianity, and in particular the challenge of engaging with the Roman intellectual elite and its highly sophisticated Graeco-Roman tradition. In this culture epics like those of Vergil and Lucan were highly valued for their language, their 'heroic' themes, and their Rome-centred ideologies.
Contemporary American Women Poets: An A-to-Z Guide
Posted By : Smirk |
Date : 07 Mar 2008 21:11 |
Comments : 0
Contemporary American Women Poets
Greenwood Press | 2002-11-30 | ISBN: 0313317836 | 480 pages | PDF | 1,6 MB
Feminist efforts have recovered the works of early women poets, and much of this rediscovered work now appears in anthologies. As a result, women poets writing today must not only struggle against a largely male tradition, but must also confront existing feminist expectations.
Posted By : bütünleme |
Date : 06 Mar 2008 21:49 |
Comments : 0
J. T. P. de Bruijn, Persian Sufi Poetry. An Introduction to the Mystical Use of Classical Poems
1997 | Routledge Curzon | ISBN: 0700703128 | Pages: 142 | PDF | ~33 MB uploaded to seven mirrors
Islamic mysticism, or sufism, has found its finest expression in the classical poetry of Persia, in particular during its most creative period up to the late 15th century. Focusing on the poems themselves rather than on their authors, this very readable introduction surveys the development of Persian mystical poetry, dealing first with the relation between Sufism and literature and then with the four main genres of the tradition: the epigram, the homiletic poem, love poetry, and symbolic narrative.
100 Great Brits: A Rhyming History from Bede to Beckham
Posted By : tot167 |
Date : 05 Mar 2008 14:25 |
Comments : 1
James Muirden “100 Great Brits: A Rhyming History from Bede to Beckham"
Summersdale Publishers | 2007-09-03 | ISBN:1840246111 | PDF | 264 pages | 1,7 Mb
Posted By : tot167 |
Date : 02 Mar 2008 17:01 |
Comments : 2
Terry Eagleton “Literary Theory: An Introduction Second Edition"
University of Minnesota Press; 2nd edition (November 1996) | ISBN: 081661251X | PDF | 234 pages | 1,2 Mb
Writers' Workshops & the Work of Making Things: Patterns, Poetry...
Posted By : tot167 |
Date : 28 Feb 2008 09:50 |
Comments : 1
Richard P. Gabriel “Writers' Workshops & the Work of Making Things: Patterns, Poetry... "
Pearson Education | 2002-06-17 | ISBN: 020172183X | PDF | 288 pages | 1,2 Mb
Poetical Collection (Divan) of Al-Shafiee (ديوان الإمام الشافعي) - Arabic
Posted By : amir28 |
Date : 19 Dec 2007 06:26 |
Comments : 2
Poetical Collection (Divan) of Al-Shafiee (ديوان الإمام الشافعي) - Arabic
PDF | 192 pages | 26,5 Mb | ISBN: 9776050913 | Arabic | 2003 Collected & Edited by Ahmad Ahmad Shtewi | Dar Al-Gadd Al-Gadeed
The Complete Arkangel Shakespeare: 38 Fully-Dramatized Plays (Arkangel Shakespeare) [BOX SET]
Posted By : Avax |
Date : 09 Dec 2007 20:53 |
Comments : 22
click to enlarge
The Complete Arkangel Shakespeare: 38 Fully-Dramatized Plays (Arkangel Shakespeare) [BOX SET]
AudioBook | PDF, MP3 (CBR 60 Kbps Mono) | 101h:36min | 713+706+671+673 Mb (2,7 Gb total)
Publisher: Audio Partners; Unabridged Edition | ISBN: 1932219005 | March 2003 | Language: English Mirrors on Ftp2share.com: Rapidshare, Depositfiles, Filefactory and Megaupload
“To Buy or Not to Buy! Educators, lovers of theatre and great literature – take note! Late in the 1990s, Harper Row began to release on cassettes the Arkangel Complete Shakespeare, all of which I reviewed in one paper or another. Using some of the best of the young theatrical talent in Great Britain and some of the older established stars of stage and screen, the producers gave us readings of every single word of every single play by Shakespeare, including the seldom-performed “Two Noble Kinsmen” which is partially by Shakespeare.
Well, hold on! Audio Partners has been contracted to release the entire set on CDs. The trick is that you cannot purchase the individual sets but are required to purchase the entire package of 38 plays for $600. That is 98 CDs in all with a playing time of just over 101 hours! Libraries and school departments take note.
Hearing them as they were released on tape in batches of four or five, I was impressed mostly with the enormity of the project but found some things to quibble about. Casting Oberon and Titania with a pair whose voices were South African or Jamaican (no Henry Higgins, I) made some sense in that it emphasized their other-worldly-ness. So did assigning Malvolio in “Twelfth Night” to an actor with a distinct Scottish accent, but giving Mercutio in “Romeo and Juliet” to the same actor was absurd. Then too there is that sudden sound effect of a train pulling out of a station in the middle of “All's Well That Ends Well”! Granted there was a production current then that did place the play in more modern times, but when one is hearing a recording with no clue as to setting, the result was jarring and should have been omitted.
In the grander roles such as Hamlet, Othello and the like, the younger actors give modern readings which might strike some as slighting demands of the high poetry. And those who long for the grander readings can turn to the re-releases of the old Shakespeare Recording Society sets.
One great disadvantage to the cassettes is that you could locate a specific scene only with much fast forwarding. With CDs, of course, you can jump to any scene by pressing the Skip button on your player. When a scene continues onto another disc, the tracking list tells you at which line the scene picks up. The price might be prohibitive to all but an institution – but I feel that every library should find its way to purchasing the complete set in much the same way that many purchased the complete set of BBC Shakespeare videos.” – Customer Review on Amazon.com
The Complete Arkangel Shakespeare: 38 Fully-Dramatized Plays (Arkangel Shakespeare) [BOX SET]
Posted By : Avax |
Date : 09 Dec 2007 20:53 |
Comments : 22
click to enlarge
The Complete Arkangel Shakespeare: 38 Fully-Dramatized Plays (Arkangel Shakespeare) [BOX SET]
AudioBook | PDF, MP3 (CBR 60 Kbps Mono) | 101h:36min | 713+706+671+673 Mb (2,7 Gb total)
Publisher: Audio Partners; Unabridged Edition | ISBN: 1932219005 | March 2003 | Language: English Mirrors on Ftp2share.com: Rapidshare, Depositfiles, Filefactory and Megaupload
“To Buy or Not to Buy! Educators, lovers of theatre and great literature – take note! Late in the 1990s, Harper Row began to release on cassettes the Arkangel Complete Shakespeare, all of which I reviewed in one paper or another. Using some of the best of the young theatrical talent in Great Britain and some of the older established stars of stage and screen, the producers gave us readings of every single word of every single play by Shakespeare, including the seldom-performed “Two Noble Kinsmen” which is partially by Shakespeare.
Well, hold on! Audio Partners has been contracted to release the entire set on CDs. The trick is that you cannot purchase the individual sets but are required to purchase the entire package of 38 plays for $600. That is 98 CDs in all with a playing time of just over 101 hours! Libraries and school departments take note.
Hearing them as they were released on tape in batches of four or five, I was impressed mostly with the enormity of the project but found some things to quibble about. Casting Oberon and Titania with a pair whose voices were South African or Jamaican (no Henry Higgins, I) made some sense in that it emphasized their other-worldly-ness. So did assigning Malvolio in “Twelfth Night” to an actor with a distinct Scottish accent, but giving Mercutio in “Romeo and Juliet” to the same actor was absurd. Then too there is that sudden sound effect of a train pulling out of a station in the middle of “All's Well That Ends Well”! Granted there was a production current then that did place the play in more modern times, but when one is hearing a recording with no clue as to setting, the result was jarring and should have been omitted.
In the grander roles such as Hamlet, Othello and the like, the younger actors give modern readings which might strike some as slighting demands of the high poetry. And those who long for the grander readings can turn to the re-releases of the old Shakespeare Recording Society sets.
One great disadvantage to the cassettes is that you could locate a specific scene only with much fast forwarding. With CDs, of course, you can jump to any scene by pressing the Skip button on your player. When a scene continues onto another disc, the tracking list tells you at which line the scene picks up. The price might be prohibitive to all but an institution – but I feel that every library should find its way to purchasing the complete set in much the same way that many purchased the complete set of BBC Shakespeare videos.” – Customer Review on Amazon.com
Posted By : anjer |
Date : 04 Dec 2007 13:36 |
Comments : 5
Mandakranta Bose, The Ramayana Revisited
Oxford University Press | ISBN:0195168321 | 2004 | PDF | 2 MB | 398 pages
The Ramayana is one of India's foundational epics, and it demonstrates a continuing power to influence social, religious, cultural, and political life.This book presents the latest in Ramayana scholarship. Fourteen leading scholars examine the epic in its myriad contexts throughout South and Southeast Asia.