Arranging Grief: Sacred Time and the Body in Nineteenth-century AmericaNYU Press, 2007 - 345 páginas 2008 Winner, MLA First Book Prize |
De dentro do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 59
... dead. She was, instead, expected to engage in continued spells of weeping and sighing, though only in private. The need to maintain this image of self-governed sensitivity also meant that grief itself could not be quickly surrendered ...
... dead."13 The cherishing of sorrow differed markedly from the Puritan ethic that dominated American mourning until the mid-eighteenth century. That system, as Mitchell Breitwieser writes, encouraged a "manly constancy or Christian ...
... dead with disciplined Christian devotion to future reunion in order to project its form across time, linking past, present, and future under the rubric of familial affection. In contrast, what we earlier saw as the "prehumanity" of the ...
... upon which those histories are constructed and reproduced: rendering time, in effect, as "something else" even in its most familiar manifestations. Freud's disconsolate perpetuation of love for the dead and Rowlandson's 16 INTRODUCTION.
... dead and Rowlandson's insistent attachment to her ruined world both exemplify the importance of attending to anachrony in any would-be historical inquiry. By anachrony, I do not simply mean expanding our understanding of what counts as ...
Conteúdo
1 | |
25 | |
9780814752227_Lucia_069118_11 | 69 |
9780814752227_Lucia_119168_11 | 119 |
9780814752227_Lucia_169214_11 | 169 |
9780814752227_Lucia_215260_11 | 215 |
9780814752227_Lucia_261268_11 | 261 |
9780814752227_Lucia_269320_11 | 269 |
9780814752227_Lucia_321338_11 | 321 |
9780814752227_Lucia_339344_11 | 339 |
9780814752227_Lucia_345346_11 | 345 |
Outras edições - Ver todos
Arranging Grief: Sacred Time and the Body in Nineteenth-Century America Dana Luciano Visualização parcial - 2007 |
Arranging Grief: Sacred Time and the Body in Nineteenth-Century America Dana Luciano Prévia não disponível - 2007 |