Tuesday, January 15, 2008
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë
I found this book incredibly compelling despite my distaste for its narrator, who struck me as crude, imperceptive, hasty, and altogether unlikeable. I liked being a better reader of his story than he was, however, and I like Helen Huntington--who may be the most realistic Victorian heroine I've ever read.
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Imagined Communities by Benedict Anderson
This book examines the phenomenon of nationalism and attempts to place it in a new perspective, denying the myth of European origins (instead locating them in the Americas). Anderson speculates nationalism has such a pull in part because it fills in cultural gaps left by the decline of religious community and dynastic realms. He investigates the roles of vernacular language, print culture, and pilgrimages (at first bureaucratic and then educational) in creating these imagined communities and traces them from the Americas to Europe and then finally to colonial areas in Southeast Asia and Africa, where the ideas are pirated from the European colonizers. The 1991 additions are particularly interesting about maps and museums; the 2006 appendix about translations of the book struck me as insufferably self-aggrandizing.
Labels:
American Revolution,
citizenship,
criticism,
culture,
England,
French Revolution,
history,
identity,
imperialism,
India,
maps,
religion,
theory,
United States
Friday, January 11, 2008
The Death of Sigmund Freud by Mark Edmundson
This book is not entirely biography, history, or philosophy. Instead, Edmundson takes the specific moment of the Anschluss and its effect on Sigmund Freud's as a starting point in exploring the paradox of Freud as a patriarchal figure attempting to dismantle the patriarchy, based on his understanding of the appeal of the fascist. This book is very smart, and mostly well-written, although I found it a little repetitive at times. Edmundson does a lovely job of incorporating rich detail in significant ways.
Labels:
Austria,
biography,
England,
history,
philosophy,
psychology,
World War II
Monday, January 7, 2008
The Return of the King by J.R.R. Tolkien
As Sam says, the third time pays for all in this trilogy. Perhaps I'm unfair in splitting my review into three parts, as this story works cohesively through all three books. I hate coming to the ending each time (perhaps the reason I keep going back to re-read the books)--I find it very sad, yet completely right. I finished the appendices for the first time out of ten reads, and some were very good--there's a lot of material there. It's still hard to get through all the linguistics, which is my own stupidity, I suppose.
Poetic Designs by Stephen Adams
This guidebook to prosody offers a concise and clear overview of different elements of poetry, focusing mainly on meter, schemes, and tropes. The discussion is richly illustrated with examples from a wide range of poets. At times, the definitions are rushed over, and I would have liked a glossary in the back, but overall, a good handbook.
The Two Towers by J.R.R. Tolkien
The second installment of this fantasy adventure carries the members of the fellowship almost to Mordor and Gondor. This time I particularly noticed the similarities between Frodo and Gollum, and also similarities between Frodo and Sauron (the foreshadowing of the missing finger). I also think that Gollum's oath on the ring was well done.
Sunday, January 6, 2008
The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien
The first installment of this epic adventure holds up after many re-readings. Some of my favorite moments this time around were Frodo's gradual acceptance of his task, his increasing willingness to let his friends accompany and help him, and Galadriel's test. I'm coming increasingly to terms with Boromir--at first, I saw him only as the bad guy who tries to steal the ring for Gondor part way through, but now I see him as a flawed individual who gets redemption.
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