= LAROUSSE DELA lANGUE ITTAI\JCAISE le.tis The richest sing le volume on the French la nguage. Here's the com plete answer to the needs of t he French person and the French-speak ing foreigner- the Larousse 'Lexis' -the ric hest all-French dictionary. Ric h in current vocabulary and usage with ov er 76,000 entri es including scientific and t echnical terms , it also feature s complete and detailed a lphabetically-a rranged gramm ar tables. In addition, it abo unds in pronun ciation guides, examples of grammatica l usage, origins and history, de finitions of alternate mean ings, literary al lusions, and sy nonyms and antonyms. Its r ichness is also reflected in the profusion of charts, tables, drawings, phot ographs and il lustrations. Riche? Puissan t! Le Figaro desc ribed it as, "L'e sprit dans lequ el a ete conc;u Lexis est excel lent. Dictionna ire de la langu e a la fois classique et m oderne, ses so ixante-dix mille vocables contiennent en outre l'essentie l de l'enorme v ocabulaire des sciences et de s techniques, a insi que les ne ologismes repandus," whi le Le Monde ha s said, "Tres ric he, accueillant (legitimement) un large vocab ulaire techniqu e, meme emprunte a l'anglais, le Lexis traduit bi en cet etat nou veau du franc;ais, pa rtage entre son heritage littera ire et philo- sophique, et so n present indu striel et pragm atique." Larousse de la Langue Fran~ aise 'Lexis' 2,110 pages, $46 .25 hardcover Larousse 572 Fifth Avenu e, New York 10 036 (212) 575-9515 Telex 12335 435 = NEW FROM THE LANGUAGE AND THOUGHT SERIES— Propositional Structure and Illocutionary Force Jerrold J. Katz “A very convincing and provocative study, which places the investigation of speech act theory on a considerably higher level.” —Noam Chomsky $7.95 paper Semantics Theories of Meaning in Generative Grammar Janet Dean Fodor “Compulsory reading for anyone with an interest in semantics.”—Deirdre Wilson, Journal of Linguistics “It is difficult to envisage a better account of recent work on semantics by generative linguists.” —Philip Johnson-Laird $7.95 paper NEW PAPERBACKS— The Bab Ballads W. S. Gilbert James Ellis, Editor “ ‘The Bab Ballads’ of W.S. 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The LeBaron Russell Briggs Prize Honors Essay in English $3.95 paper Harvard University Press Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138 Runnin’ Down Some Lines The Language and Culture of Black Teenagers Edith A. Folb With a Foreword by Claudia Mitchell-Kernan, Director, Center for Afro-American Studies, UCLA More than a language, black teenage talk is a way to survive. Folb’s book is an introduction to die dignity and ingenuity of that survival. $15.00 The Language of Canaan Metaphor and Symbol in New England from the Puritans to the Transcendentalists Mason I. Lowance, Jr. “Lowance greatly expands our knowledge of Puritan discourse and he argues quite persua- sively for the continuity of aspects of this Puritan vision into the literature of the nine- teenth century.”—Alan Heimert $17.50 Sartre as Biographer Douglas Collins “Collins situates and analyzes with much fin- esse, knowledge, intelligence, and measure, the importance of biography in Sartre’s thought and development.” —Victor Brombert $16.50 Jean Renoir The French Films, 1924 -1939 Alexander Sesonske Pure fascination for the film addict. Detailed descrip- tions and hundreds of frames from the French films. “With Sesonske’s book I have my arch of triumph.”—Jean Renoir. Harvard Film Studies $25.00 cloth; $9.95 paper 480 pp. Milton’s Theatrical Epic The Invention and Design of Paradise Lost John G. 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Milton The chief concern of this study is what the au- thor calls the capital W Western novel—the serious works of literature which for too long have been confused generically with the lo- wercase w western: the popular, formula west- ern hacked out for the mass market, xviii, 341 pages, $17.95 The Contours of European Romanticism By Lilian R. Furst Furst introduces a new, more flexible and more comprehensive approach to the problem of dealing with the diverse manifestations of Romanticism in European literature. 192 pages, $21.50. Destroyer and Preserver Shelley’s Poetic Skepticism By Lloyd Abbey Focusing on eight major poems which span the length of Shelley’s mature career, Abbey traces in detail the full effect of Shelley’s skepticism upon his art. xiv, 171 pages, $14.50. Commentary on the First Six Books of Virgil’s Aeneid By Bernardus Silvestris Translated with introduction and notes by E.G. Schreiber and Thomas E. Maresca This is the first translation of Bernardus’s Commentary into English. Basing their work on the authoritative Latin version of Julian Ward Jones and Elizabeth Frances Jones, the authors render Bernardus’s often difficult and idiosyncratic medieval Latin into clear English in a translation keyed to both the Aeneid and the Joneses’ Latin edition, xxxvi, 129 pages, $11.50. Faulkner The Transfiguration of Biography By Judith Bryant Wittenberg Wittenberg explores the degree to which and the ways in which Faulkner told his own story, again and again, attempting from first to last to establish in his art the meaning and resolution which seemed to elude him in life, viii, 264 pages, $17.50. Lamb as Critic Edited by Roy Park This anthology of Lamb’s critical writing, the first to appear for more than fifty years, pro- vides a panoramic view of Lamb’s critical achievement, revealing the inadequacy of cur- rent critical attitudes to his work. 384 pages, $21.50. Milton’s Sonnets and the Ideal Community By Anna K. Nardo Using the principle of "community”—the rela- tion of the individual to self, home, friends, country, mankind, and God—Nardo shows that Milton presents a comprehensive scheme of man and his offices whose sophistication is unmatched in the sonnet form, xiv, 213 pages, $15.95. NEW Bison Books Miss Morissa Doctor of the Gold Trail By Mari Sandoz In this dramatic no^el of a young woman doctor on the brawling Nebraska frontier of the 1870s, Sandoz captures the whole turmoil of the changing frontier in the days of Custer, Calamity Jane, and Buffalo Bill Cody. vi, 250 pages, paper BB 739 $5.50. Wolf Willow By Wallace Stegner A memoir of Stegner’s boyhood in the beautiful Cypress Hills country of southern Saskatchewan, where his family homesteaded from 1914 to 1920. "Stegner has summarized the frontier experience as only one who was a part of it could do. The result is a rewarding and memorable book.”—New York Times Book Review. xii, 360 pages, cloth $18.50; paper BB 708 $6.95. Shakespeare and Company By Sylvia Beach Shakespeare and Company, an American bookshop in Paris, was headquarters for expatriate American and European writers of the 1920s, including James Joyce, Gide, and Valery. "[Owner] Miss Beach’s book is intimate, not scholarly, and thus full of in- teresting information. Her reminiscences are literally an index of everybody in the twenties, and she knew them all.”—Janet Flanner, The New Yorker. xiv, 230 pages, illustrated, paper BB 733 $4.95. Warlock By Oakley Hall With the legend of Wyatt Earp as his material and the ambiguity of evil his theme, Hall builds a taut novel that explores the problems of ethical choice while giving a true picture of the life behind the American frontier myth. viii, 471 pages, cloth $22.50; paper BB 737 $6.95. A Life By Wright Morris A brilliant portrait of the last hours of an old man’s life. "More than any of Morris’s seventeen previous novels, the story takes off from the workaday world in search of the ineffable. . . .”—Time. vi, 152 pages, cloth $11.95; paper BB 704 $3.95. LANDMARK EDITION Romance and Tragedy A Study of the Classic and Romantic Elements in the Great Tragedies of European Literature By Prosser Hall Frye Preface by Thomas M. Raysor "A new edition of one of the most ambitious and able ventures in comparative literature ever at- tempted in this country. . . . Mr. Frye takes his title from A. W. Schlegel’s remark that 'the great mod- em dramatists . . . must be judged on the principle of romance,’ but he develops his thesis that 'tragedy and romance become the typical genres of classic and romantic literature’ so independently as a mod- ern classicist that he is in opposition to Schlegel, not under his influence.”—Thomas M. Raysor. xiv, 372 pages, $21.00. University of Nebraska Press 901 North 17th Street Lincoln 68588 NEW ON PRINCETON’S SHELVES... THE JAPANESE NOVEL OF THE MEIJI PERIOD AND THE IDEAL OF INDIVIDUALISM Janet A. Walker The Western ideal of individualism had a pervasive influence on the culture of the Meiji period (1868-1912) and also, this author contends, the development of the modern Japanese novel. Focusing on the work of four late Meiji writers, she analyzes their contributions to the development of a type of novel whose aim was the depic- tion of the modern Japanese individual. $18.50 THE COMIC MATRIX OF SHAKESPEARE’S TRAGEDIES ROMEO AND JULIET, HAMLET, OTHELLO, AND KING LEAR Susan Snyder Comic elements in Shakespeare’s tragedies have often been noted, but while most critics have tended to concentrate on humorous interludes or on a single play, Susan Snyder seeks a more comprehensive understanding of how Shakespeare used the conventions, structures, and assump- tions of comedy in his tragic writing. She argues that Shakespeare’s early mastery of romantic comedy deeply influenced his tragedies both in dramaturgy and in the expression and development of his tragic vision. $12.50 SATIRIC INHERITANCE, RABELAIS TO STERNE Michael Seidel Arguing that satiric potential is latent in virtually all dispensation, succession, and inheritance narratives, Michael Seidel suggests a new and comprehensive understanding of satire’s place in the more general context of narrative theory. The notion of inheritance shares with traditional narrative action the need to transmit and preserve form. But by converting the promise of inheritance into the conspiracy of violation, satire depicts the revolt against organic and institutional lines of continuity. $16.00 HEINRICH HEINE A MODERN BIOGRAPHY Jeffrey L. Sammons “A major achievement in German literary scholarship. It takes a great deal of wisdom, knowledge, and plain level- headedness to write a book about Heine that will command the respect of all Heine scholars, no matter where they are situated in the modern political spectrum. Jeffrey Sammons has written such a book, and it will be the Heine biography for many decades to come.”—Hugo Schmidt, University of Colorado “Jeffrey Sammons gives us the most complete picture of Heine to date. The general reader as well as the specialist will be fascinated by this rich portrayal.” —Robert Mollenauer, University of Texas A rich biographical portrayal of the con- troversial German author who has been one of the liveliest topics in German literary studies for the past 15 years. The first fully documented biography of Heine in over a century, this book traces his incompatibility with the “pure” German spirit, and parallels his situation with that of dissident writers today. Illus. Cloth, $27.50. Limited Paperback Edition, $9.75 PROTESTANT POETICS AND THE SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY RELIGIOUS LYRIC Barbara Kiefer Lewalski In this major revision of current views on the English 17th-century religious lyric, Barbara Lewalski argues that the pervasive Protestant emphasis upon the Bible as a book requiring philological and literary analysis fostered a fully developed theory of biblical aesthetics defining both poetic art and spiritual truth. She finds that this theory characterizes the work of the leading religious lyric poets—Donne, Herbert, Vaughan, Traherne, and Taylor— who, she contends, owe more to such contemporary, English, and Protestant influences than to Counter-Reformation, continental, and medieval Catholic resources. Illus. $27.50 Winner of the 1979 Conference on Christianity and Literature Award. PLOT, STORY, AND THE NOVEL FROM DICKENS AND POE TO THE MODERN PERIOD Robert L. Caserio “When writers and readers of novels lose interest in plot and story,” Robert Caserio writes, “they appear to lose faith in the meaning and the moral value of acts.” From this perspective he attempts to explain the growing antagonism to plot, storytelling, and the representation of action in English and American fiction, and boldly challenges the major critical positions of Northrop Frye, Roland Barthes, and Edward Said with regard to the inter- pretation and evaluation of narrative trends. $15.00 DANTE, POET OF THE DESERT HISTORY AND ALLEGORY IN THE DIVINE COMEDY Giuseppe Mazzotta “I had not thought there was room for still another interpretation of the Commedia, but I was wrong... .Professor Mazzotta’s book not only presents a brilliant new interpretation supported by massive research, but is in my opinion one of the most important studies of Dante to appear in our time.”—R.E. Kaske, Cornell Uniuersity Reading the Divine Comedy as a dramati- zation of a coherent vision of universal history, and finding the Exodus story crucial to its structure, Mazzotta constructs a theory of the composition of Dante’s poem and how the poet intended it to be read. $20.00 MEASURE FOR MEASURE. THE LAW, AND THE CONVENT Darryl J. Gless Through careful attention to the contexts of Renaissance culture invoked by the language, action, and visual spectacle in Measure for Measure, Darryl Gless brings a new and original interpretation to one of Shakespeare’s most problematic plays. This leads him to a comprehensive and coherent reading of the play that has important implications for further under- standing of much of the Shakespearean canon and of other Renaissance works, especially those dealing with theological issues. $15.50 ROBERT FROST AND NEW ENGLAND THE POET AS REGIONALIST John C. Kemp Though critics traditionally have paid homage to Robert Frost’s New England identity by labeling him a regionalist, Kemp is the first to investigate what was in fact a highly complex relationship between poet and region. Through a frankly revisionist interpretation, he not only demonstrates how Frost’s relationship to New England and his attempt to portray himself as the “Yankee farmer poet” affected his poetry; he also shows that the regional identity became a problem both for the poet and his readers. $13.50 NOW IN PAPERBACK THE ANALOGY OF THE FAERIE QUEENE James Nohrnberg Limited Paperback Edition, $15.00. (Cloth, $40.00) WRITE FOR OUR NEW LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE CATALOGUE. PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY 08540 The University of Pennsylvania Press Will award two prizes of $5,000 to each of the authors of the most distinguished works of scholarship in the humanities and the social sciences in 1982. The John L. Haney Prizes Will be awarded for original con- tributions to knowledge that demonstrate excellence in scholar- ship, perception, and style. The judges for Humanities will be: Paul Fussell, Janet James, and Leo Marx. The judges for Social Sciences will be: Clifford Geertz, George Homans, and Charles Tilly. The competition will open January 1, 1980, and close December 31, 1981. A list of the rules is available from: The University of Pennsylvania Press 3933 Walnut Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104 (215) 243-6261 r Womens Autobiography Essays in Criticism EDITED WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY ESTELLE C. JELINEK Studies of the autobiographies of literary or politically active women written between the seventeenth and the twentieth centuries. Reveals differ- ences from men’s autobiographies with respect to form, content, and intention, as well as the more intro- spective nature of the women’s accounts. cloth $25.00 paper $9.95 A DOUBLE DYING Reflections on Holocaust Literature BY ALVIN H. ROSENFELD “His delicate literary sensibility and the authority of his Judaic learning give us a genuine understanding and a critical appreciation of those imag- inative works which have been char- acterized as Holocaust literature.” —Lucy S. Dawidowicz “. . . a major contribution to the field. Rosenfeld’s . . . mastery of the subject is apparent from the first page.” —Elie Wiesel $17.50 The Structure of Intonational Meaning Evidence from English BY D. ROBERT LADD. JR. “. . . should be read by every linguist who has any special interest in in- tonation. As a general overview of the field, it may in fact also be the best available book-length study for the specialist.” —Bruce T. Downing, University of Minnesota $18.50 Interpreting Folklore BY ALAN DUNDES Thirteen essays that attempt to in- crease our understanding of human nature and human culture through the interpretation of folklore. Dundes examines a broad panorama of cur- rent folk metaphors in order to dis- cover the underlying worldview they express. cloth $25.00 paper $9.95 Available at bookstores or send $1.50 postage and handling for first book. 25c for each additional book, to order from publisher. Indiana University Press Tenth and Morton Streets Bloomington, Indiana 47405 Literary Studies and Poetry From the Sunken Garden The Fiction of Ellen Glasgow, 1916-1945 Julius Rowan Raper “There were hints in Without Shelter that Julius Raper might become the definitive critic of the Glasgow canon, and his present work establishes him as just that." — Edgar E. MacDonald $18.95 Instead of Music Poems by Alain Bosquet A Bilingual Edition Selected and Translated, with an Introduction, by William Frawley "I admire the deftness of these translations, their fidelity to the French, their clarity, their accuracy." — Wallace Fowlie $7.95 Shadow Over the Promised Land Slavery, Race, and Violence in Melville's America Carolyn L. Karcher Placing Melville's works against the background of nineteenth-century debates about slavery and race, this new study examines his treatment of slavery, race, and violence as it evolved from Typee through his major fiction of the 1850s and his poetry to The Confidence-Man and Billy Budd. $25.00, cloth,- $8.95, paper Eudora Welty's Achievement of Order Michael Kreyling "This is the strongest critical study I have seen of Eudora Welty." — Lewis P. Simpson "Kreyling has what I regard as a sine qua non for good Welty criticism: a sensitivity to her work and style which shows itself in the critic's own style" — Ruth M. Vande Kieft $20.00 Chaucer's Knight The Portrait of a Medieval Mercenary Terry Jones Best known as a member of the Monty Python comedy team, Terry Jones in his secret career as a medievalist has long thought that historians and literary critics have misjudged Chaucer's Knight as a conventional and rather dull pillar of Christian chivalry; instead, the Knight is actually a crude mercenary, a view that calls for a reassessment of the Knight's Tale. $20.00 Louisiana State University Press Baton Rouge 70803 New in Paperback The American Novel and Its Tradition Richard Chase In this classic study of the American novel, Richard Chase traces the romantic tradition in literature through two centuries of American writers. Starting with Charles Brockden Brown and finishing with William Faulkner, Chase studies at length works by James Fennimore Cooper, Nathaniel Hawthorne. Herman Melville, Mark Twain. Henry James. F. Scott Fitzgerald, and others. Through romance. Chase shows, these writers mirror the extremes of American culture —from the Puritan melodrama of good and evil to the pastoral idyll inspired by the American wilderness. 84.95 paperback Comedy “An Essay on Comedy" by George Meredith “Laughter" by Henri Bergson edited, with an introduction and appendix, by Wylie Sypher Laughter makes us human, runs the theme of these two renowned works. Comedy, according to George Meredith, serves an important social and moral function by redeeming us from our pride, posturings, and other sins. Focusing on laughter. Henri Bergson develops a psychological and philosophical theory of comedy that ranks it as one of life's driving forces. Complementing both essays is Wylie Sypher’s appendix, which traces comedy back to its origins in early Greek civilization. 84.95 paperback The Revels Plays Two Tudor Interludes Anonymous edited by Ian Lancashire Bearing some resemblance to Everyman, these are two allegories representing man’s fall into sin and his later redemption. The plays date from the early years of the reign of Henry VIII, a time when publication of plays was uncommon, and this is the first scholarly edition to offer a sound text, textual apparatus, intro- duction, and commentary. 820.00 Magnificence John Skelton edited by Paula Neuss This is the first critical edition of Magnificence for more than seventy years. It is Skelton's only surviving play and the earliest morality play to have a political, rather than religious, emphasis. 816.00 The Johns Hopkins University Press Baltimore, Maryland 21218 A Guide to Computer Applications in the Humanities Susan Hockey This introductory guide was specifically written to help the person with little or no knowledge about computers understand how to use computer technology in prepar- ing indexes, catalogs, word counts, concordances, and other research projects in the humanities. Susan Hockey describes the many all-purpose computer programs that already exist and are designed to perform the purely mechanical functions that, if done by hand, can take months and years of tedious work. Si6.95 Glyph 7 Textual Studies This unique semiannual series devoted to reassessing contemporary critical trends. Glyph provides an international forum for both young and established scholars, whose writings reflect (and reflect on) the main currents of American and European traditions. Contributors to Glyph 7 include Manfred Frank, writing on “The Endless Text," Irving Wohlfarth on Walter Benjamin, Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe on “The Question of Genre," Richard Macksey on the Keatsian ode. and Eugenio Donato on “Keats and the Problem of Belatedness." $5.95 paperback, $16.50 hardcover Literature and Society Selected Papers from the English Institute. 1978. New Series, no. 3 edited, with a preface, by Edward W. Said This collection of papers from the famed English Institute focuses on the situation of writing in history and in human society. Contributions include "The Wages of Satire" by Harry Levin: "'To Entrap the. Wisest': A Reading of The Merchant of Venice" by Rene Girard: and "Ad/d Feminam: Women. Liberation, and Society" by Catherine Stimpson. $7.50 New in paperback The Act of Reading A Theory of Aesthetic Response Wolfgang Iser "This book has a special appeal to all interested in literary theory since it carefully analyzes the relation between reader and text. All future studies of the reading proc- ess will have to take account of The Act of Reading."—Ralph Cohen. University of Virginia The Act of Reading intends to change the way we view literature. Instead of looking at what a text means. Wolfgang Iser asks what happens to us while we are engaged in reading and how the meaning of a text is assembled in the mind of the reader. From there, he evolves a more general theory of how aesthetic response is initiated, develops, and functions. $5.95 paperback. $15.00 hardcover The Johns Hopkins University Press Baltimore, Maryland 21218 The Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley Volume 1. "A part of the Elect" edited by Betty T. Bennett This is the first edition of Mary Shelley's letters to appear in more than thirty years. The letters in volume one. which date from 1814 to 1827. reflect all aspects of her dramatic personal and professional life, including her relation- ship with her husband, poet Percy Bysshe Shelley: their literary aspirations: and the extraordinary Shelley-Byron circle. Betty Bennett has provided an excellent introduction on Mary Shelley's life and career and on the many themes that run through her letters. $30.00 Wallace Stevens The Making of the Poem Frank Doggett From Wallace Stevens's poems, journals, and letters. Frank Doggett develops a portrait of the poet witnessed in the act of writing his poetry. In discussing the genesis of Stevens's poems. Doggett also touches upon given and possible meanings, recurring thematic images, and the structure and discourse of Stevens’s poetry. "Doggett's study has as its primary virtue the sensitivity of a reader who has spent a long time meditating on Stevens's poems.. ..And he does this with clarity and grace, as he has always done, in a style that honors his subject."—Joseph Riddel. UCLA $12.00 Prodigal Sons A Study of Authorship and Authority David Wyatt This study of the lives and works of Henry James. W. B. Yeats, Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner. James Agee. Robert Penn Warren, and Robertson Davies builds on the tale of the prodigal son. Each writer, in life and in literature, acts out the conflict and eventual resolution between father and son. between authorship and authority. Wyatt's analysis focuses on the decisive moment when each author makes his accommodation to authority and ceases wrestling with his role as a son. For some. Wyatt shows, the moment ensures future strength: for others, a waning of energy. $12.95 The Novel-Machine The Theory and Fiction of Anthony Trollope Walter M. Kendrick Using Anthony Trollope's Autobiography as the basis for his analysis, Walter Kendrick demonstrates how Trollope's self-conceived life story actually outlines a theory for the making of fiction—from conception and writing to marketing and effect. Kendrick goes on to show how Trollope's theory of realism is mani- fested in his other works and concludes that “as much as they write about life, Trollope’s novels write about themselves, teaching their readers how to live but also how to read.” $10.95 The Johns Hopkins University Press Baltimore. Maryland 21218 GATES OF EDEN American Culture in the Sixties Morris Dickstein “The best book on that...decade.”—The Boston Globe “The autobiographical narrative would alone commend Gates of Eden to anyone who wants to know what really happened in a period around which clouds of myth and obfuscation are already beginning to gather.”—Christopher Lasch, The New York Times Book Review “A vivacious, highly original work...which stands a very good chance of remaining the permanent book of reference on the period.” —Newsweek Now in paperback $4.95 ON MORAL FICTION John Gardner “Criticism with both eyes open, fearless, illuminating, proving that the concern of the critic is with art, that true art is moral and not trivial.”—Robert Kirsch, The Los Angeles Times Paper, $3.95 A LION FOR LOVE A Critical Biography of Stendhal Robert Alter “Excellent...There is a wide choice of bi- ographies of Stendhal by now, but I know of none more coherent or civilized than this one.” —New York Times Book Review National Book Critics Circle Award nominee for Criticism for 1979. Illustrated, $13.95 MUSIC AFTER MODERNISM Samuel Lipman “His intelligent and compelling voice... is strong and sure, and its appraisals of music are often singularly apt...At its best it is the finest that can be heard today.”—The New York Times Book Review $11.95 GODEL, ESCHER, BACH: an Eternal Golden Braid Douglas R. Hofstadter “Exhilarating, challenging, valuable...a large, eclectic, beautifully designed and lu- cidly written book that attempts to link Godel’s theorem to the art of M.C. Escher and to the music of J.S. Bach.”— New York Review of Books Illustrated, $20.00 EMILE or On Education Jean-Jacques Rousseau Translated and with an Introduction by Allan Bloom “Allan Bloom’s excellent new translation of Emile reads as if Rousseau had written in English, and so allows readers...to ap- preciate his irresistible prose.” — The New Yorker $18.50 NEW SIGNIFICANT BASIC BOOKS INC. 10 EAST 53RD ST, NEW TORE 10022 Books from University Presses Faith and Folly in Shakespeare’s Romantic Comedies By R. Chris Hassell, Jr. Georgia, March 1980, $20.00 American Literature and Literary Criticism American Indian Literature An Anthology By Alan R. Velie Oklahoma, 1979, $15.95 cl., $6.95 p. H.G. Wells Discoverer of the Future By R.D. Haynes New York, February 1980, $28.50 The Diary of Isaac Backus By Isaac Backus Brown, January 1980, $120.00/3 vol. set Enter Mysterious Stranger American Cloistral Fiction By Roy R. Male Oklahoma, 1979, $9.95 Tennessee Williams Perspective in Shakespeare's English Histories By Larry S. Champion Georgia, April 1980, $16.00 Turgenev and England By Patrick Waddington New York, June 1980, $40.00 Thirteen Essays Edited by Jac Tharpe Mississippi, May 1980, $10.00 Theodore Roethke An American Romantic By Jay Parini Massachusetts, 1979, $12.50 Asian Literature and Literary Criticism The Poetic Memoirs of Lady Daibu Translated, with an Introduction by Phillip Tudor Harries Stanford, August 1980, tentatively $15.00 Thoreau in the Human Community By Mary Elkins Moller Massachusetts, June 1980, $12.50 Toward a New American Literary History Essays in Honor of Arlin Turner Edited by Louis J. Budd, Edwin H. Cady, and Carl L. Anderson Duke, January 1980, $14.75 A Tale of Flowering Fortunes Annals of Japanese Aristocratic Life in the Heian Period Translated, with an Introduction and Notes, by William H. and Helen Craig McCullough Stanford, May 1980, $62.50/2 vols. Tales of Yamato A Tenth-Century Poem-Tale Translated by Mildred Tahara Hawaii, May 1980, $15.00 English Language Literature and Literary Criticism Alchemy and Finnegans Wake By Barbara D. DiBernard SUNY, April 1980, $24.00 cl., $7.95 p. The Art of Joyce’s Syntax in Ulysses By Roy K. Gottfried Georgia, May 1980, $15.00 Romance Languages Literature and Literary Criticism Autour de Borduas By Jean Ethier-Blais Montreal, 1979, $12.95 (Continued next page) Books from University Presses Eca de Queiros and European Realism By Alexander Coleman New York, January 1980, $17.50 cl., $6.95 p. Drama, Theatre, and Cinema Emile Zola Correspondance Tome ll(1868-mai 1877) By B.H. Bakker Montreal, 1980, $48.00 Alfred Jarry Nihilism and the Theater of the Absurd By Maurice M. LaBelle New York, May 1980, $15.00 cl., $6.95 p. Histoire simple et veritable By Ghislaine Legendre Montreal, 1979, $19.95 Anarchism in the Dramas of Ernst Toller By Michael Lee Ossar SUNY, April 1980, $29.95 Lorca’s New York Poetry Social Injustice, Dark Love, Lost Faith By Richard L. Predmore Duke, March 1980, $8.95 Black Drama of the Federal Theatre Era Beyond the Formal Horizons By E. Quita Craig Massachusetts, June 1980, $15.00 The Cowboy Hero His Image in American History and Culture Slavic and Eastern European Literature and Literary Criticism By William W. Savage, Jr. Oklahoma, 1979, $12.95 Ivan Bunin A Study of His Fiction By James B. Woodward North Carolina, June 1980, $17.50 Peer Gynt Revised edition By Henrik Ibsen Translated by Rolf Fjelde Minnesota, June 1980, $15.00 cl., $3.95 p. Soviet Satire of the Twenties By Richard L. Chappie Florida, June 1980, $7.25 The Theater of Fernando Arrabal A Garden of Earthly Delights By Thomas J. Donahue New York, February 1980, $15.00 cl., $6.95 p. Other Literature and Literary Criticism Folklore Down in the Holler A Gallery of Ozark Folk Speech By Vance Randolph and George Wilson Oklahoma, 1979, $14.95 cl., $7.95 p. A Knot in the Thread The Life and Work of Jacques Roumain By Carolyn A. Fowler Howard, March 1980, $12.00 Milton and the Baroque History of Ideas By Murray Roston Pittsburgh, May 1980, $24.95 The Wayward and the Seeking A Collection of Writings by Jean Toomer Edited by Darwin T. Turner Howard, April 1980, $14.95 Classical Rhetoric and Its Christian and Secular Tradition from Ancient to Modern Times By George A. Kennedy North Carolina, February 1980, $18.00 cl., $9.00 p. Books from University Presses The Comedy of Language By Fred Miller Robinson Massachusetts, September 1980, tentatively $15.00 Reference and Bibliography A Critical Bibliography of French Literature Volume VI, The Twentieth Century, In 3 parts Edited by Douglas W. Alden and Richard A. Brooks Linguistics Aliens and Linguists By Walter E. Meyers Georgia, April 1980, $16.00 Directory of Language Planning Organizations By Joan Rubin Hawaii, January 1980, $3.50 p. Syracuse, January 1980, $120.00/3 book set ($150 after July 1) John Galsworthy An Annotated Bibliography of Writings About Him Compiled and Edited by Earl E. Stevens and H. Ray Stevens Northern Illinois, March 1980, $30.00 Language and Cultural Description Essays by Charles O. Frake Selected and Introduced by Anwar S. Dil Stanford, June 1980, tentatively $17.50 References for Students of Language Planning By Joan Rubin and Bjorn H. Jernudd Hawaii, January 1980, $3.50 p. The Philosopher’s Guide to Sources, Research Tools, Professional Life, and Related Fields By Richard T. DeGeorge Kansas, June 1980, $20.00 Supplement to F. Scott Fitzgerald A Descriptive Bibliography Poetry By Matthew J. Bruccoli Pittsburgh, June 1980, $17.50 The Hard Essential Landscape By Van K. Brock Florida, February 1980, $6.95 The Salamander Migration By Cary Waterman Pittsburgh, May 1980, $9.95 cl., $4.50 p. Walter Pater An Annotated Bibliography of Writings ‘About Him Compiled and Edited by Franklin E. Court Northern Illinois, March 1980, $25.00 Satan Says By Sharon Olds Journals Pittsburgh, April 1980, $9.95 cl., $4.50 p. Windrose By Brewster Ghiselin Utah, May 1980, $15.00 Biography Edited by George Simson Hawaii, Quarterly, Indiv. $3.50, $12.50/yr.; Inst. $4.00, $15.00/yr. The London Theatre World, 1660-1800 Edited by ROBERT D. HUME. Many of the 12 essays in this book probe new territory in the exploration of Restoration and 18th-century English drama: music, publishing history, and company management. Others extend such traditional topics as social and political history in relation to theatre. Illustrated. $18.50 John Gardner A Bibliographical Profile By JOHN M. HOWELL, with an Afterword by JOHN GARDNER. " So now," writes John Gardner in his afterword to this first annotated bibliography of works by and about him, compiled by his biographer, "reading John Howell's list of 'Separate publications' - XXXI in all (however many that is) - I feel pleasure and then alarm, rolling myeyes toward theceiling, asking God, 'Is it enough?' " Illustrated. $12.95 The Plays of David Garrick Edited with Commentary and Notes by HARRY WILLIAM PEDICORD and FREDERICK LEWIS BERGMANN. This new edition represents the first attempt since 1798 to publish a complete edition of Garrick's plays and the first to include all of Garrick's adaptations of Shakespeare and other English dramatists. Volume 1: Garrick's Own Plays, 1740-1766 $35.00 Volume 2: Garrick's Own Plays, 1767-1775 $35.00 (Volumes 3 through 6 in preparation.) Thomas Pynchon The Art of Allusion By DAVID COWART. This fresh examination of Pynchon's use of painting, film, music, and literature shows that his true art lies in humanistic allusions that stress the possibility of spiritually separating oneself from the modern wasteland. (Crosscurrents/Modern Critique Series) $10.95 Visual Literature Criticism A New Collection Edited by RICHARD KOSTELANETZ. This first assessment of visual literature in English brings together some of the best-known practitioners and critics of this exciting art form. They discuss the expanding range of creative activity encompassed byvisual literatureaswellasauthorsand media. Illustrated. $12.50 The Reader, the Text, the Poem The Transactional Theory of the Literary Work By LOUISE M. ROSENBLATT. "A persuasive portrait of just how the reader's own approach helps determine how, when, and why a particular 'poem' might work effectively or not. This should be a basic text."-Booklist. $10.95 1SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY PRESS £ P.O. Box 3697, Carbondale, Illinois 62901 Harper &) Row Spanning Literary Horizons SARA TEASDALE Woman and Poet William Drake. Drawing upon letters and manuscripts available for the first time, Drake shows how personal experience and emotions shaped the work of this early twentieth century American feminist poet. "A profoundly moving, revelatory biography1'—San Francisco Examiner & Chronicle. “Communicates the courage and tenacity of her life, the eloquence of her sensibility"— Robert Kirsch, Los Angeles Times. "Sympathetic, astute, utterly without con- descension. . .Teasdale herself could not have wished for a better biographer.” -New York Times Book Review. $15.00 THE WOMAN WHO LOST HER NAMES Selected Writings of American Jewish Women Compiled and Edited by Julia WolfMazow. Short stories, memoirs, and excerpts of novels by and about Jewish women. Contributors include Tillie Olsen, E.M. Broner, Grace Paley, and others, known and unknown. "Reading this book one gets, finally, beyond the mythology that has defined the American Jewish woman. And it is high time'.'-Carole Klein, author of Aline. $10.00 THE PORTENT A Story of Second Sight George MacDonald. Out of print for more than 50 years, The Portent is a rich blend of young romantic love and fantasy. “Transports us to another reality... to the center of our imaginative experience. MacDonald grants the human spirit a breadth few people do"—Los Angeles Times. Frontispiece by Maurice Sendak. $8.95 WINTER OF THE SALAMANDER The Keeper of Importance Ray Young Bear. An invigorating, moving collection of poems by this Native American poet, amply supporting his steadily-growing reputation. Austere, earthy verse that speaks of the Indian experience. A volume in Harper & Row’s Native American Publishing Program. $8.95; paper, $3.95 THE WATERFRONT WRITERS The Literature of Work Edited by Robert Carson. Poetry, essays, drawings, short stories, photographs, and a film script all produced by San Francisco longshoremen.'An angry, passionate book... it possesses a compelling immediacy”- The Bay Guardian. $10.00 At bookstores Harper et) Row SAN FRANCISCO 1700 Montgomery St CA 9411, 1817 Parlez-vous Do you speak tHabla frangais? French? Frances? Ecole frangaise d ate 1980 July 7th Six credits University de Montreal August 15th Six levels L'ecole frangaise d'dtd is set up to attract different kinds of students: Junior College, Com- munity College and University students (aged 18 or over) anxious to improve their proficiency in French; teachers of French anxious to improve their know- ledge of the language and especially those who never had a chance to live in a French milieu; finally people interested in French for its cultural significance. For information and application M. Pierre Niedlispacher Tdi.: 1514) 343-6975 Directeur Fcoie frangaise d'dtd Faculte de I'dducation permanente University de Montreal C.P. 6128, Succursale A Montreal, Qudbec H3C3J7 THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA PRESS • THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA to =i I- (= =) TH E U N IV E R S IT Y O F G E O R G IA P R E S S • TH E U N IV E R S IT Y O F G E O R G IA P R E S S • T H E U N IV E R S IT Y O F G E O R G IA P R E S S • f-* t Solzhenitsyn and Dostoevsky A Study in the Polyphonic Novel VLADISLAV KRASNOV Aground-breaking investigation of Solzhenitsyn’s novelistic art, this book delineates the unifying system behind Solzhenitsyn’s artistic technique, establishes a link between this system and Dostoevsky’s polyphony, and defines Solzhenitsyn’s art as twentieth-century spiritual realism. $17.50 Literary Impressionism, James and Chekhov H. PETER STOWELL Mr. Stowell’s study represents the first full investiga- tion of literary impressionism in English, setting forth a definition of literary impressionism that forms a framework for the examination of the impressionism of James and Chekhov. The author sees impres- sionism as the true beginning of modernism. $17.00 Keats, Skepticism, and the Religion of Beauty RONALD A. SHARP “The book is clearly the best, most accurate and incisive account yet available of Keats’s religious outlook. His notion of Keats as a secular religious humanist is both valuable in itself and as an indubitable aid in reading poems, particularly ‘The Eve of St. Agnes’ and the first ‘Hyperion,’ where Sharp is at his best, a fine critic indeed”—Harold Bloom. $14.00 The Emergence of Thackeray’s Serial Fiction EDGAR F. HARDEN $25.00 English Mediaeval Monasteries, 1066-1540 ROY MIDMER $17.50 U N IV E R S IT Y O F G E O R G IA P R E S S • TH E U N IV E R S IT Y O F G E O R G IA P R E S S • TH E U N IV E R S IT Y O F G E O R G IA P R E S S • TH E U N IV E R S IT Y . HE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA PRESS • THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA PRESS • THE “For someone who is interested in science fiction, the book should be fascinating.”—Isaac Asimov The Cybernetic Imagination in Science Fiction by Patricia S. Warrick Warrick examines over 200 short stories and novels which portray computers as robots, as heroes and villains, gods and demons. “Warrick’s serious study is note- worthy in several respects. It proposes a science fiction aesthetic and applies it to recog- nized classics. .. . Her book suggests that tech- nology is growing too complex for the literary imagination to grapple with easily.”—Publishers Weekly “Shows an amazing com- bination of understand- ing of cybernetics and of science fiction. ... It sets a new high standard for clear, literate, and thoughtful consideration of the field.”— Isaac Asimov $15.00 at your bookstore or directly from The MIT Press Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, MA 02142 By Jeffrey Mehlman A STUDY IN DIDEROT CATARACT is a highly original study of literary spec-ulation in the form of a precise and stimulating read- ing of Diderot. The book’s point of inception is the re- course of both Diderot and, two centuries later, Michel Serres, to Lucretius as a guide to the “science” of their respective ages. In elaborating a genealogy that moves from Lucretius to Diderot to Serres, the study constructs a tripartite cataract—cloud/dike/downpour—whose me- teorology comes to saturate Diderot’s text, cutting across such divisions as philosophy, fiction, theater, and poli- tics. . As the first American scholar to incorporate the critical work of Michel Serres, Mehlman succeeds not only in using Serres’s idiom but also in developing his own ex- ceptional new understanding of Diderot in a modern context. $12.50 WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY PRESS Distributed by Columbia University Press Address for orders: 136 South Broadway, Irvington, New York 10533 Such Holy Song Music as Idea, Form, and Image in the Poetry of William Blake by B. H. Fairchild, Jr. Blake’s holy trinity of art consisted of poetry, painting, and music. In this informed study, Dr. Fairchild examines the role of music in Blake’s poetry, from the melodic “Songs” to the complex orchestration and thematic line of The Four Zoas. As a detailed examination of Blake’s composite art that has received the least study, this book contributes a refreshing view into the visionary’s often puzzling but always fascinating work. $11.00 Arthur Mervyn or Memoirs of the Year 1793 by Charles Brockden Brown, edited by Sydney J. Krause and S. W. Reid. The second volume to be published in the Bicentennial Edition of the Novels and Related Works of Charles Brockden Brown consists of the two parts of the novel having the Philadelphia yellow fever epidemic as its background. The CEAA- approved text is accompanied by an historical essay by Normal S. Grabo, a textual essay, and appendices detailing variants, emendations, and notes. $27.00 The Kent State University Press, Kent, Ohio 44242 DAVID BRONSEN (Hrsg.) Jews and Germans from 1860 to 1933: The Problematic Symbiosis (Reihe Siegen. Beitrage zur Literatur- und Sprachwissenschaft, Band 9) 1979. VI, 383 Seiten. Kartoniert DM 75.-. Leinen DM 94.- HELEN FEHERVARY U. HENRY GERLACH (Hrsg.) Holderlin and the Left The Search for a Dialectic of Art and Life (Reihe Siegen. Beitrage zur Literatur- und Sprachwissenschaft, Band 3) 1977. 280 Seiten. Kartoniert DM 48.-. Leinen DM 64.- Briefe von und an Friedrich Hebbel Bisher unbekannte Schriftstiicke 1978. 366 Seiten. Kartoniert DM 112.-. Leinen DM 130.- HARTMUT KUBCZAK Was ist ein Soziolekt? Uberlegungen zur Symptomfunktion sprachlicher Zeichen unter besonderer Beriicksichtigung der diastratischen Dimension (Sprachwissenschaftliche Studienbiicher: Erste Abteilung) 1979.166 Seiten. Kartoniert DM 28.- R. LEY, M. WAGNER, J. M. RATYCH, K. HUGHES (Hrsg.) Perspectives and Personalities Studies in Modem German Literature Honoring Claude Hill (Beitrage zur neueren Literaturgeschichte. Dritte Folge, Band 37) 1978. 376 Seiten u. 1 Titelbild. Kartoniert DM 140.-. Leinen DM 160.- TEUT ANDREAS RIESE (Hrsg.) Vistas of a Continent Concepts of Nature in America Edited on behalf of The European Association for American Studies (Anglistische Forschungen/136) 1979.168 Seiten mit 3 Karten und 2 Abb. im Text. Kartoniert DM 50.-. Leinen DM 65.- CARL WINTER UNIVERSITATSVERLAG D-6900 HEIDELBERG LUTHERSTRASSE 59 INSTITUTE FOR AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES Chartered by the Regents of the University of the State of New York CENTRE D’ETUDES EUROPEENNES TOULON En collaboration avec I’Universite de Toulon et du Var. Un programme complet de: Economie, Droit, Histoire, Art, Langue, Litterature, Administration des Entreprises, Marche Commun, et du Commerce International 15 “credits” par semestre. Logement: dans des families toulonnaises. Frais d’etudes: $1,440 pour un semestre; $2,580 pour I’annee. Pour tous renseignements, ecrire (par avion) a: Monsieur le Directeur Centre d’Etudes Europeennes 27, place de I’Universite 13625 Aix-en-Provence France Tel: (42) 23.39.35 English Institute 39th Annual Session, Harvard University August 29-September 1,1980 Form and Context in 18th Century Narrative Directed by Leopold Damrosch, Jr., University of Virginia Leopold Damrosch, Jr., University of Virginia Michael Rosenblum, Indiana University Mary Poovey, Swarthmore College Beyond Tradition: Projects of American Modernist Poetry Directed by Joseph Riddel, UCLA John Irwin, The Johns Hopkins University Herbert Schneidau, University of California, Santa Barbara Helen Regueiro Elam, SUNY-Albany Film and Film Criticism Directed by William Rothman, Harvard University William Rothman, Harvard University Stanley Cavell, Harvard University Ann Douglas, Columbia University Geoffrey Hartman, Yale University Mimesis and Representation Directed by Stephen Greenblatt, University of California, Berkeley Hugh Kenner, The Johns Hopkins University Michael Holquist, University of Texas Leo Bersani, University of California, Berkeley Michael Fried, The Johns Hopkins University For Registration and Further Information Write: Kenneth Johnston, Secretary, The English Institute Dept. of English, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405 SUMMER COURSE IN SPAIN TOLEDO JULY 1-31, 1980 El Colegio Universitario de Toledo—(Universidad Complutense de Madrid) offers a course on SPANISH LANGUAGE, LITERATURE— AND CIVILIZATION (in Spanish), specializing in Spanish Grammar, Vocabulary, Conversation, Phonetics, Readings and Literature. Other Matters: History, Art, Geography. For further details: The Director Summer Course Palacio Universitario C/ Cardenal Lorenzana, 1 TOLEDO.- SPAIN Tel. (925) 22-63-50 Hobart & William Smith Colleges CENTER FOR LANGUAGE STUDY Latin • French • Spanish • Hebrew • Japanese German • Chinese • Russian • Italian June 23-July 11,1980 July 14 • August 1,1980 August 4-22,1980 Elementary and Intermediate Study Elementary and Intermediate Study Intermediate and Readings Study Students may enroll for one, two, or three sessions. Tuition—$350 for three weeks, $550 for six weeks, $750 for nine weeks. Hobart and William Smith Colleges admit academically qualified students of any race, color, age, creed, national origin, or handicap. Pursuant to Title IX of PL 92-318, the Colleges do not discriminate on the basis of sex in the educational programs they operate. For further information and application form, please write: Center for Language Study Box F-69 Hobart and William Smith Colleges Geneva, New York 14456 COLLINGWOOD ASSOCIATES, INC. ■J. . ) COMPUTER-ASSISTED ) RESEARCH IN THE HUMANITIES ARCHIVES BIBLIOGRAPHIES CONCORDANCES DICTIONARIES EDITIONS INDICES PROJECT DESIGN COMPUTER SYSTEMS HARDWARE SELECTION SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT MANAGEMENT REPORTS <=> Address: Telephone: 2025 I Street, N.W., #519 Washington, D.C. 20006 202 466-7522 First time in paperback The classic biography of one of the most extraordi- nary families in American history, written by one of our century’s pre-eminent critics. A detailed study of Henry Sr., William, Henry and Alice with a background of the nation’s history from the time of Emerson to World War I. $7.95, now at your bookstore VINTAGE BOOKS A division of Random House Shakespeare on Microfiche Essential studies of Shakespeare and the Renaissance now reissued in compact, inexpensive microfiche. All texts are reproduced from the original or other early editions in high quality 24X prints, and each set is shipped in a rigid storage frame punched for standard 3-ring binders. The Plays of William Shakespeare edited by Samuel Johnson. The great critic's historic edition, with the text of Johnson's Prefaces and his annotations as well. Original edition in eight volumes. London: J. & R. Tonson, 1765. ISBN 0-935232-54-0 (about 40 fiches plus frame) $38.85 Holinshed's Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland by Raphael Holinshed. Perhaps the best known of Shakespeare's sources and a gold mine of information. In the accurate, readable text issued by J. Johnson. Original edition in six volumes. London: J. Johnson, 1808. ISBN 0-935232-55-9 (about 50 fiches plus frame) $48.85 A Transcript of the Register of the Company of Stationers, 1554-1640 edited by Edward Arber. The most important source for the history of Elizabethan and Jacobean printing. Original edition in five volumes. London: Private Printing, 1894. ISBN 0-935232-53-2 (about 30 fiches plus frame) $28.85 Order from your bookseller or direct from the publisher. A free catalogue of other JMC publications, microfiche equipment and micrographic supplies is available on request. J. Moynes & Company, 7319 Dinwiddie Street, Downey, CA 90241 From Classic to Romantic —two new poetry titles from Meridian THE SELECTED POETRY OF POPE Edited by Martin Price Within the tightly re- stricted form of the heroic couplet, Pope created some of the most elegant, precise, and expressive poetry in the English lan- guage. This careful se- lection reveals Pope’s full range. Chronology of the poet’s life. Ex- tensive Footnotes. Revised and Updated Bibliography. THE " SELECTED POETRY OF (t// ■ ft!SfA/f//S'M /u MERIDIAN F532/S4.95 -THE- SELECTED POETRY -AND- PROSE -0E- WORDSWORTH MERIDIAN F533/S5.95 THE SELECTED POETRY AND PROSE OF WORDSWORTH Edited by Geoffrey H. Hartman A comprehensive selection of Wordsworth’s works- including “Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey,” "The Ruined Cottage,” and The Prelude. Hartman’s introduction pro- vides effective insights into the creative and political in- fluences in Wordsworth's life, his career, and the sig- nificant personal events that shaped it. Footnotes. Chronology of the poet’s life. Complete Bibliography. New American Library Education 1633 Broadway New York, N.Y. 10019 LANGUAGE TEACHERS SEPTEMBER POSITIONS FRENCH SPANISH LATIN OTHER ACADEMIC AREAS Exciting opportunities at leading elementary and secondary independent schools. Day and boarding schools throughout USA. Write ROBERT M. SANDOE & ASSOCIATES 29 Newbury Street Boston, MA 02116 757 Bay Street San Francisco, CA 94109 or call toll-free 800-225-7986 CALL FOR PAPERS FOR THE SPRING OF 1981 THE WORLD OF YESTERDAY’S HUMANIST TODAY: Stefan Zweig’s Time, Life and Work in the Modern World A three day Symposium to be held at State University College, Fredonia, New York, the site of the largest Stefan Zweig archive in North America, on the occasion of the Centennial of his birth, 1981 Program: Keynote: The World of Yesterday in the View of an Intellectual Historian Section meetings: I The French Connection; the Peace Movement II Zweig, the Interpreter of History and Human Greatness III Zweig, the “Humanizer” in Literature IV Zweig, the Emigrant V Zweig in Brazil Closing Address: The Significance of Zweigian Humanism today Other activities: Opening of the Stefan Zweig Humanities Seminar Room; Presentation of THE SILENT WOMAN Presentation of THERSITES Please address inquiries or suggestions as well as proposals for paper topics to: Professor Marion Sonnenfeld Coordinator, Zweig Symposium SUNY College at Fredonia, N.Y. 14063 before June 30, 1980. Papers should be in English and 20 minutes maximum length. THE SHIGA HERO William F. Sibley “In any academic or intellectual discipline, there appear from time to time certain books which pre- sent a standard of accomplishment so much higher than had ever appeared before and which open up areas of inquiry so wholly unanticipated by previous works in the field that they mark a turning point in the evolution of the entire disci- pline. I believe The Shiga Hero to be such a book.” Jay Rubin, University of Washington Cloth 256 pages $16.00 DISCOVERERS, EXPLORERS, SETTLERS The Diligent Writers of Early America Wayne Franklin Franklin traces the diligence of the first chroni- clers of America through the three stages of dis- covery, exploration, and settlement, and shows how each stage brought forth its own kind of American writing. Cloth 240 pages Illus. $15.00 ***************** What they are saying about THE PHILOSOPHY OF COMPOSITION by E. D. Hirsch, Jr. “Curiously skewed and downright quaint.” Janet Emig “What’s wrong with Hirsch’s The Philos- ophy of Composition is, in my view, Hirsch’s philosophy of composition.” Donald C. Freeman “A good mind should not be wasted in such a manner.” Gary Tate “The first three chapters in this book are better left unread.” Erika Lindemann “I wish this book only limited success.” Susan Miller “An interesting and important book ... a moral assertion of considerable force.” Albert R. Kitzhaber “Hirsch’s work ought to become a milestone in our progress toward formulating common aims and methods.” Frederick Crews “Among recent books about teaching com- position this clearly ranks as the most pro- found and scholarly.” R. Baird Schuman “The Philosophy of Composition should have an important impact on the study of writing.” Marlene Scardamalia and Carl Bereiter “This book deserves to be read by every teacher of written and oral composition.” Carroll C. Arnold All of which goes to show that Ahnn B. Keman was an accurate prophet when he wrote: “The Philosophy of Composition is going to be one of the most controversial, and probably one of the most remarkable, books of our time on the increas- ingly crucial subject of writing.” Cloth 224 pages $9.00 The University of Chicago Press Chicago 60637 CHICAGO Since 1891, Publishers of Scholarly Books andJournals Sex and Sensibility Ideal and Erotic Love from Milton to Mozart Jean H. Hagstrum In Sex and Sensibility Jean Hagstrum brings a lifetime of distinguished study to the idea of love in all its aspects from the Restoration to Romanticism. ‘ ‘This fine book is a crowning achieve- ment .... It is plain from the first page that we are dealing with an authoritative voice —clear and judicious, often witty and pointed, with not a word wasted. The schol- arship is sound, the insights fresh and origi- nal, and the result is a work of importance to eighteenth-century specialists and to literary scholars and the general reader as well.”—Ronald Paulson, Yale University Cloth 368pages Illus. $25.00 June After the New Criticism Frank Lentricchia ‘ 'After the New Criticism provides us with a genealogy of those modern forces from Kant to Foucault and Derrida that continue to shape contemporary American theories of interpretation. Lentricchia’s work should cause both the Ancients and the Moderns to re-examine their critical values.”—John Carlos Rowe, University of California at Irvine \eswt \\ .WiWfMW' o$cx ttttd Aftet the New Criticism Frank 'Lentricchia Cloth 416 pages $20.00 June The Mind of the Middle Ages An Historical Survey: A.D. 200-1500 Frederick B. Artz Paper 608pages $6.50 Available Also available in cloth Folktales of Egypt Edited and translated by Hasan M. El-Shamy Foreword by Richard M. Dorson Folktales of the World series, Richard Af. Dorson, editor Cloth 416 pages $25.00 March Fiction and the Shape of Belief A Study of Henry Fielding With Glances at Swift, Johnson, and Richardson Sheldon Sacks Paper 296pages $5.95 Available The University of Chicago Press Chicago 60637 In paperback: Textual Strategies Perspectives in Post-Structuralist Criticism Edited by JOSUE V. HARARE This volume of essays makes available some of the most important and most representative work written in the wake of structuralism. "One of the most important statements about the problems of contemporary criticism that I have ever seen." — Hayden White, Wesleyan University. Contributors: Roland Barthes, Gilles Deleuze, Paul de Man, Jacques Derrida, Eugenio Donato, Michel Foucault, Gerard Genette, Rene Girard, Josue V. Harari, Neil Hertz, Louis Marin, Joseph Riddel, Michael Riffaterre, Edward Said, Michel Serres, and Eugene Vance. $7.95 Story and Discourse Narrative Structure iu Fiction and Film By SEYMOUR CHATMAN. "When I opened the Chatman volume, I read the blurb first: ‘A judicious and well-informed book, Story and Discourse should become the standard guide to narrative and to modern thinking about narrative.' The blurb is right ."-Gerald Prince, Modem Language Notes. "An important American contribution to the study of narrative theory.’’—Choice. $5.95 Wallace Stevens The Poems of Our Climate By HAROLD BLOOM. "Bloom’s scholarship is impeccable... .An important purchase." — Library Journal. "As a result of this book, no one will ever read either Stevens or several other modern poets in the same way again.” —Vincent Miller, The Yale Review. “The largest and most generous interpretation of Stevens’ poetry we have yet had." -Poetry. $8.95 Woman’s Fiction A Guide to Novels by and about Women in America, 1820-1870 By NINA BAYM. This book traces the birth, growth, and decline of a genre of popular fiction that dominated American literary taste for at least a generation — a genre created by women and for women. "The book is a sturdy and important work of criticism."-C7tozce. $4.95 Beyond Amazement New Essays on John Ashbery Edited by DAVID LEHMAN. "Beyond Amazement will be extremely useful to readers of poetry, and especially to teachers and students.” - David Kalstone, Rutgers University. Ashbery’s poems must be met on their own astonishing terms. Surveying his entire career to date, the ten critics writing for this volume have set out to establish those terms-to lead readers beyond amazement, toward appreciation. $7.95 CORNELL UNIVERSITY PRESS ______ P.O. Box 250, Ithaca, New York 14850 ■