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Dutch drama --- English drama --- Theater and society --- Women and literature --- Women in literature --- Flemish drama --- Dutch literature --- Woman (Christian theology) in literature --- Women in drama --- Women in poetry --- Literature --- Actors --- Society and theater --- Theater --- English literature --- Themes, motives --- History --- Social status --- Social aspects --- Sociology of the family. Sociology of sexuality --- Drama --- Thematology --- anno 1600-1699
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But --- Dancers --- Mind and body. --- Artists --- Entertainers --- Body and mind --- Body and soul (Philosophy) --- Human body --- Mind --- Mind-body connection --- Mind-body relations --- Mind-cure --- Somatopsychics --- Brain --- Dualism --- Philosophical anthropology --- Holistic medicine --- Mental healing --- Parousia (Philosophy) --- Phrenology --- Psychophysiology --- Self --- Psychological aspects --- Butō --- Ankoku Buto --- Butoh --- Modern dance
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"This is a study of gay narrative writings published in Spain at the turn of the twentieth century. The book scrutinises the ways in which the literary production of contemporary Spanish gay authors engages with homophobic and homophile discourses, as well as with the vernacular and international literary legacy"-- Provided by publisher.
Homosexuality in literature. --- Gays' writings, Spanish --- Spanish fiction --- Homosexuality and literature --- History and criticism. --- History. --- Literature and homosexuality --- Literature --- Spanish literature --- Spanish gays' writings --- Gay people's writings, Spanish
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Edmond Jabès was one of the most intriguing Jewish thinkers of the 20th century--a poet for the public and a Kabbalist for those who read his work more closely. This book turns his writings into a ground-breaking philosophical achievement: thinking which is manifestly indebted to the Kabbalah, but in the post-religious and post-Shoah world. Loss, exile, negativity, God's absence, writing and Jewishness are the main signposts of the negative ontology which this book offers as an interpretation of Jabès' work. On the basis of it, the book enquiries into the nature of the miraculous encounter between Judaism and philosophy which occurred in the 20th century. Modernity means that philosophical Judaism is necessarily a re-constructed tradition: not a source, but a field played with by modern forces.
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Edmond Jabès was one of the most intriguing Jewish thinkers of the 20th century--a poet for the public and a Kabbalist for those who read his work more closely. This book turns his writings into a ground-breaking philosophical achievement: thinking which is manifestly indebted to the Kabbalah, but in the post-religious and post-Shoah world. Loss, exile, negativity, God's absence, writing and Jewishness are the main signposts of the negative ontology which this book offers as an interpretation of Jabès' work. On the basis of it, the book enquiries into the nature of the miraculous encounter between Judaism and philosophy which occurred in the 20th century. Modernity means that philosophical Judaism is necessarily a re-constructed tradition: not a source, but a field played with by modern forces.
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Edmond Jabès was one of the most intriguing Jewish thinkers of the 20th century--a poet for the public and a Kabbalist for those who read his work more closely. This book turns his writings into a ground-breaking philosophical achievement: thinking which is manifestly indebted to the Kabbalah, but in the post-religious and post-Shoah world. Loss, exile, negativity, God's absence, writing and Jewishness are the main signposts of the negative ontology which this book offers as an interpretation of Jabès' work. On the basis of it, the book enquiries into the nature of the miraculous encounter between Judaism and philosophy which occurred in the 20th century. Modernity means that philosophical Judaism is necessarily a re-constructed tradition: not a source, but a field played with by modern forces.
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Edmond Jabès was one of the most intriguing Jewish thinkers of the 20th century--a poet for the public and a Kabbalist for those who read his work more closely. This book turns his writings into a ground-breaking philosophical achievement: thinking which is manifestly indebted to the Kabbalah, but in the post-religious and post-Shoah world. Loss, exile, negativity, God's absence, writing and Jewishness are the main signposts of the negative ontology which this book offers as an interpretation of Jabès' work. On the basis of it, the book enquiries into the nature of the miraculous encounter between Judaism and philosophy which occurred in the 20th century. Modernity means that philosophical Judaism is necessarily a re-constructed tradition: not a source, but a field played with by modern forces.
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Catholic Church. --- Church of Rome --- Roman Catholic Church --- Katholische Kirche --- Katolyt︠s︡ʹka t︠s︡erkva --- Römisch-Katholische Kirche --- Römische Kirche --- Ecclesia Catholica --- Eglise catholique --- Eglise catholique-romaine --- Katolicheskai︠a︡ t︠s︡erkovʹ --- Chiesa cattolica --- Iglesia Católica --- Kościół Katolicki --- Katolicki Kościół --- Kościół Rzymskokatolicki --- Nihon Katorikku Kyōkai --- Katholikē Ekklēsia --- Gereja Katolik --- Kenesiyah ha-Ḳatolit --- Kanisa Katoliki --- כנסיה הקתולית --- כנסייה הקתולית --- 가톨릭교 --- 천주교
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The book deals with the issue of the Holocaust in the Polish literature for children and adolescents. Drawing upon some of the leading Polish authors of the twentieth and the twentieth-first centuries, the author reveals the historical, ideological, and cultural entanglement of their works. The main focus of the book is to search for reasons behind the outpouring of interest in the Holocaust noticed in the most recent Polish literature for younger readers. Among these reasons, the author lists the Polish local and historical context, the new approach to issues traditionally seen as taboo, the development of memory and postmemory narratives, and the postmodern shift from a discursive totality and universalist explanations.
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), in literature. --- Adults --- Children --- Contemporary literature --- Dudek --- Holocaust --- Literature --- memory --- Polish --- Polish literature for children and adolescents --- Post --- Postmemory --- Post-memory --- Pract --- Practices --- Reading --- Wojcik --- World War II --- Young
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