Marilynne Robinson
portes grátis
Marilynne Robinson
Elliott, Anna Maguire; Daly, Jennifer; Sykes, Rachel
Manchester University Press
03/2022
320
Dura
Inglês
9781526134653
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
Introduction - Rachel Sykes, Jennifer Daly, and Anna Maguire Elliott
Robinson in context: A critical discussion - Sarah Churchwell, Richard H. King, Bridget Bennett
Writing, form, and style
1 'It might be better to burn them': Archive fever and the Gilead novels of Marilynne Robinson - Daniel King
2 'One day she would tell him what she knew': Disturbance of the epistemological conventions of the marriage plot in Lila - Maria Elena Carpintero Torres-Quevedo
3 Robinson's triumphs of style - Jack Baker
Gender and environment
4 The female orphan and an ecofeminist ethic-of-care in Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping and Lila - Anna Maguire Elliott
5 Souls all unaccompanied: Enacting feminine alterity in Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping - Makayla Steiner
6 The domestic geographies of grief: Bereavement, time and home spaces in Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping and Home - Lucy Clarke
Imagined histories: Race, religion, and rights
7 Domesticating political feeling, affect and memory in Marilynne Robinson's Home - Christopher Lloyd
8 'Onward Christian liberals': Marilynne Robinson's essays and the crisis of mainline Protestantism - Alexander Engebretson
9 Presence in absence: The spectre of race in Gilead and Home - Emily Hammerton-Barry
Robinson and her contemporaries
10 'Everything can change': Civil rights, civil war and radical transformation in Home and Gilead - Tessa Roynon
11 'A great admirer of American education': Robinson as professor and defender of 'America's best idea' - Steve Gronert Ellerhoff and Kathryn E. Engebretson
12 Acknowledging a numinous ordinary: Marilynne Robinson and Stanley Cavell - Paul Jenner
Epilogue - 'A little different every time': Accumulation and repetition in Jack - Rachel Sykes -- .
Robinson in context: A critical discussion - Sarah Churchwell, Richard H. King, Bridget Bennett
Writing, form, and style
1 'It might be better to burn them': Archive fever and the Gilead novels of Marilynne Robinson - Daniel King
2 'One day she would tell him what she knew': Disturbance of the epistemological conventions of the marriage plot in Lila - Maria Elena Carpintero Torres-Quevedo
3 Robinson's triumphs of style - Jack Baker
Gender and environment
4 The female orphan and an ecofeminist ethic-of-care in Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping and Lila - Anna Maguire Elliott
5 Souls all unaccompanied: Enacting feminine alterity in Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping - Makayla Steiner
6 The domestic geographies of grief: Bereavement, time and home spaces in Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping and Home - Lucy Clarke
Imagined histories: Race, religion, and rights
7 Domesticating political feeling, affect and memory in Marilynne Robinson's Home - Christopher Lloyd
8 'Onward Christian liberals': Marilynne Robinson's essays and the crisis of mainline Protestantism - Alexander Engebretson
9 Presence in absence: The spectre of race in Gilead and Home - Emily Hammerton-Barry
Robinson and her contemporaries
10 'Everything can change': Civil rights, civil war and radical transformation in Home and Gilead - Tessa Roynon
11 'A great admirer of American education': Robinson as professor and defender of 'America's best idea' - Steve Gronert Ellerhoff and Kathryn E. Engebretson
12 Acknowledging a numinous ordinary: Marilynne Robinson and Stanley Cavell - Paul Jenner
Epilogue - 'A little different every time': Accumulation and repetition in Jack - Rachel Sykes -- .
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
American fiction; contemporary literature; historical fiction; Marilynne Robinson; Gilead; Iowa; race; gender; The Iowa Writers Workshop; Barack Obama
Introduction - Rachel Sykes, Jennifer Daly, and Anna Maguire Elliott
Robinson in context: A critical discussion - Sarah Churchwell, Richard H. King, Bridget Bennett
Writing, form, and style
1 'It might be better to burn them': Archive fever and the Gilead novels of Marilynne Robinson - Daniel King
2 'One day she would tell him what she knew': Disturbance of the epistemological conventions of the marriage plot in Lila - Maria Elena Carpintero Torres-Quevedo
3 Robinson's triumphs of style - Jack Baker
Gender and environment
4 The female orphan and an ecofeminist ethic-of-care in Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping and Lila - Anna Maguire Elliott
5 Souls all unaccompanied: Enacting feminine alterity in Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping - Makayla Steiner
6 The domestic geographies of grief: Bereavement, time and home spaces in Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping and Home - Lucy Clarke
Imagined histories: Race, religion, and rights
7 Domesticating political feeling, affect and memory in Marilynne Robinson's Home - Christopher Lloyd
8 'Onward Christian liberals': Marilynne Robinson's essays and the crisis of mainline Protestantism - Alexander Engebretson
9 Presence in absence: The spectre of race in Gilead and Home - Emily Hammerton-Barry
Robinson and her contemporaries
10 'Everything can change': Civil rights, civil war and radical transformation in Home and Gilead - Tessa Roynon
11 'A great admirer of American education': Robinson as professor and defender of 'America's best idea' - Steve Gronert Ellerhoff and Kathryn E. Engebretson
12 Acknowledging a numinous ordinary: Marilynne Robinson and Stanley Cavell - Paul Jenner
Epilogue - 'A little different every time': Accumulation and repetition in Jack - Rachel Sykes -- .
Robinson in context: A critical discussion - Sarah Churchwell, Richard H. King, Bridget Bennett
Writing, form, and style
1 'It might be better to burn them': Archive fever and the Gilead novels of Marilynne Robinson - Daniel King
2 'One day she would tell him what she knew': Disturbance of the epistemological conventions of the marriage plot in Lila - Maria Elena Carpintero Torres-Quevedo
3 Robinson's triumphs of style - Jack Baker
Gender and environment
4 The female orphan and an ecofeminist ethic-of-care in Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping and Lila - Anna Maguire Elliott
5 Souls all unaccompanied: Enacting feminine alterity in Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping - Makayla Steiner
6 The domestic geographies of grief: Bereavement, time and home spaces in Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping and Home - Lucy Clarke
Imagined histories: Race, religion, and rights
7 Domesticating political feeling, affect and memory in Marilynne Robinson's Home - Christopher Lloyd
8 'Onward Christian liberals': Marilynne Robinson's essays and the crisis of mainline Protestantism - Alexander Engebretson
9 Presence in absence: The spectre of race in Gilead and Home - Emily Hammerton-Barry
Robinson and her contemporaries
10 'Everything can change': Civil rights, civil war and radical transformation in Home and Gilead - Tessa Roynon
11 'A great admirer of American education': Robinson as professor and defender of 'America's best idea' - Steve Gronert Ellerhoff and Kathryn E. Engebretson
12 Acknowledging a numinous ordinary: Marilynne Robinson and Stanley Cavell - Paul Jenner
Epilogue - 'A little different every time': Accumulation and repetition in Jack - Rachel Sykes -- .
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.