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Tony Tanner

    City of Words: American Fiction 1950-1970
    The American Mystery
    Thomas Pynchon
    The Reign of Wonder
    Prefaces to Shakespeare
    Orgullo y prejuicio
    • 2021

      Thomas Pynchon

      • 98 páginas
      • 4 horas de lectura

      Focusing on the work of Thomas Pynchon, this introduction delves into his early short stories and provides insights into his novels. Set against the backdrop of Pynchon's life, it offers a detailed examination of his literary contributions, including lesser-known stories. Originally published in 1982, the book serves as a valuable guide for readers looking to navigate Pynchon's complex narratives and themes.

      Thomas Pynchon
    • 2019

      Adultery in the Novel

      Contract and Transgression

      • 398 páginas
      • 14 horas de lectura

      Adultery serves as a pivotal theme in literature, particularly in bourgeois novels of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Tony Tanner explores this topic by examining its significance in works such as Rousseau's La Nouvelle Héloïse, Goethe's Die Wahlverwandtschaften, and Flaubert's Madame Bovary. His analysis delves into the roles of women, family dynamics, societal norms, and the evolution of sexuality, highlighting how transgressions of marriage contracts reflect broader cultural concerns.

      Adultery in the Novel
    • 2018
    • 2012
    • 2012

      Prefaces to Shakespeare

      • 848 páginas
      • 30 horas de lectura

      In the final ten years of his life, the author tackled the largest project any critic in English can take on - writing a preface to each of Shakespeare's plays. This title collects these prefaces. It introduces some of the most significant scholarship on Shakespeare to show the reader how certain critics frame large issues in a useful way.

      Prefaces to Shakespeare
    • 2010

      The Reign of Wonder

      Naivety and Reality in American Literature

      • 400 páginas
      • 14 horas de lectura

      Focusing on the themes of wonder and cultivated naivety, the author delves into the intricacies of American literature. The exploration highlights how these concepts shape narratives and character development, inviting readers to reconsider their understanding of literary works. Through critical analysis and engaging insights, the book offers a fresh perspective on the interplay between innocence and experience in the American literary canon.

      The Reign of Wonder
    • 2005

      The Europeans

      • 192 páginas
      • 7 horas de lectura

      In the hope of making a wealthy marriage, Eugenia, the Baroness M©ơnster, and her younger brother, the artist Felix, descend on the Wentworths, in Boston. Installed in a nearby house, they become close friends with the younger Wentworths, Gertrude, Charlotte and Clifford. Eugenia's wit, guile and sophistication, and Felix's debonair vivacity form an uneasy alliance with the Puritan morality and the frugal, domestic virtues of the Americans. A rich and delicately balanced commedy of manners, The Europeans weighs the values of the established order against thos of New England society, but makes no simple judgements, only subtle contrasts and beautifully observed comparisons.

      The Europeans
    • 2004

      The American Mystery

      American Literature from Emerson to Delillo

      • 268 páginas
      • 10 horas de lectura

      This collection features insightful essays by the late Tony Tanner, exploring a diverse array of significant American authors. Tanner's analyses delve into the themes, styles, and cultural contexts of these writers, offering readers a deeper understanding of their contributions to literature. Through his unique perspective, the essays illuminate the complexities of American literary identity and the evolution of its narrative forms.

      The American Mystery
    • 2003

      Orgullo y prejuicio

      • 320 páginas
      • 12 horas de lectura

      La emoción de algunas escenas no solo es un dato biográfico, sino que además revela que ya no temía contarlo

      Orgullo y prejuicio
    • 1995

      Nietzsche said that he never travelled anywhere without a volume of Emerson's essays in his pocket, while Mathew Arnold described Emerson as 'the greatest prose writer of the century'. It is a remarkable writer who could at once appeal to a man considered a pillar of Victorian society, and to a man dedicated to bringing down such pillars. In his own time Emerson was considered a profoundly radical thinker, but after his death he was increasingly seen as a bland Boston Brahmin, contentedly ripening with the new England melons, benignly meditating on such viperous notions as the Over–soul.He is now appreciated as one of the truly seminal American writers, refusing all orthodoxies, complacencies and fixities—both a truly celebratory and deeply adversarial thinker. A unique paperback edition, with introduction and chronology of Emerson's life and times.

      Essays and Poems