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John Glavin Gets State Post , OAC Review, V.50, No.4, January 1938, Page 238
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1

John Glavin Gets State Post , OAC Review, V.50, No.4, January 1938, Page 238

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1938
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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John Glavin Gets State Post , OAC Review, V.50, No.4, Jan.1938
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1
John Glavin Vs. Rhode Island Hospital
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 8

John Glavin Vs. Rhode Island Hospital

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1878
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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The Good New
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 318

The Good New

In this memoir, John Glavin returns to Italy to teach Shakespeare¿s Italian plays to contemporary American students. In the process they all come to understand themselves and their own lives in deep and revealing ways.

After Dickens
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 244

After Dickens

After Dickens is both a performative reading of Dickens the novelist and an exploration of the potential for adaptive performance of the novels themselves. John Glavin conducts a historical inquiry into Dickens's relationship to the theatre and theatricality of his own time, and uncovers a much more ambivalent, often hostile, relationship than has hitherto been noticed. In this context, Dickens's novels can be seen as a form of counter-performance, one which would allow the author to perform without being seen or scrutinized. But Glavin also identifies a rich performative potential in Dickens's fiction, and describes new ways to stage that fiction in emotionally powerful, critically acute adaptations. The book as a whole, therefore, offers a reading of Dickens through an unusual alliance between literary criticism and theatrical performance.

Dickens Adapted
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 613

Dickens Adapted

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2017-03-02
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  • Publisher: Routledge

From their first appearance in print, Dickens's fictions immediately migrated into other media, and particularly, in his own time, to the stage. Since then Dickens has continuously, apparently inexhaustibly, functioned as the wellspring for a robust mini-industry, sourcing plays, films, television specials and series, operas, new novels and even miniature and model villages. If in his lifetime he was justly called 'The Inimitable', since his death he has become just the reverse: the Infinitely Imitable. The essays in this volume, all appearing within the past twenty years, cover the full spectrum of genres. Their major shared claim to attention is their break from earlier mimetic criteria - does the film follow the novel? - to take the new works seriously within their own generic and historical contexts. Collectively, they reveal an entirely 'other' Dickensian oeuvre, which ironically has perhaps made Dickens better known to an audience of non-readers than to those who know the books themselves.

Dickens on Screen
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 242

Dickens on Screen

Television and film, not libraries or scholarship, have made Charles Dickens the most important unread novelist in English. It is not merely that millions of people feel comfortable deploying the word 'Dickensian' to describe their own and others' lives, but that many more people who have never read Dickens know what Dickensian means. They know about Dickens because they have access to over a century of adaptations for the big and small screen. Dickens on Screen, includ ing an exhaustive filmography, is an invaluable resource for students and scholars alike.

The Immune
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 325

The Immune

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2011-06-30
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  • Publisher: eBookIt.com

The Immune is an allegorical science fiction thriller with political intrigue by Doc Lucky Meisenheimer.

Now a Major Motion Picture
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 236

Now a Major Motion Picture

Going beyond the process of adaptation, Geraghty is more interested in the films themselves and how they draw on our sense of recall. While a film reflects its literary source, it also invites comparisons to our memories and associations with other versions of the original. For example, a viewer may watch the 2005 big-screen production of Pride and Prejudice and remember Austen's novel as well as the BBC's 1995 television movie. Adaptations also rely on the conventions of genre, editing, acting, and sound to engage our recall--elements that many movie critics tend to forget when focusing solely on faithfulness to the written word.

Theorizing Adaptation
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 377

Theorizing Adaptation

"Asking why adaptation has been seen as more problematic to theorize than other humanities subjects, and why it has been more theoretically problematic in the humanities than it has been in the sciences and social sciences, Theorizing Adaptation seeks to both explicate and redress "the problem of theorizing adaptation" through a metacritical history of theorizing adaptation from the late seventeenth century to the present, a metatheoretical theory of the relationship between theorization and adaptation in the humanities, and analysis of the rhetoric of theorizing adaptation. The history finds that adaptation was not always the bad theoretical object that it increasingly became from the late ...