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In a Place Like that
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 268

In a Place Like that

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Anyone's Game
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 371

Anyone's Game

This title tells the story of a young woman, a Russian refugee who makes an impulsive marriage to aid her escape. Life in a Scottish fishing village in the shadow of the Great War makes her feel packed in 'like a herring in a box' and she reverses her tracks back to Moscow.

The Secret Artist
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 356

The Secret Artist

Widely acclaimed for giving "an understanding of the connection between Nietzsche’s personal experience and his most famous ideas" (Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, New York Times) in her biography of Nietzsche, Nietzsche in Turin, Chamberlain now renders a similar service to readers of Freud. In this book, part biography, part literary criticism, she takes the reader into the mind of Freud, toward a better understanding of the thinker, his work, and art itself. The very idea of the subconcious as a constant, active presence in our daily lives was Freud’s greatest contribution and has allowed generations of people to experience their lives more deeply. His rigorous exploration of the dynamism ...

Nietzsche in Turin
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 280

Nietzsche in Turin

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1998-12-15
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  • Publisher: Macmillan

During 1888 in Turin, Italy, Friedrich Nietzsche wrote three of his most important works--"Ecce Homo, Twilight of the Idols" and "The Antichrist". In this accessible, moving biography, Chamberlain examines with passion and insight the mind of a genius at its creative pinnacle.

Motherland
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 360

Motherland

Introduces key Russian thinkers prior to the 1917 revolution, offering insight into regional philosophical belief systems about happiness, society, and morality that challenges popular conceptions.

The Philosophy Steamer
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 444

The Philosophy Steamer

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2007
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  • Publisher: Atlantic

In 1922, Lenin personally drew up a list of some 160 undesirable intellectuals mostly philosophers, academics, scientists and journalists to be deported from the new Soviet State. Were going to cleanse Russia once and for all he wrote to Stalin, whose job it was to oversee the deportation. Two ships sailed from Petrograd that autumn, taking Old Russias eminent men and their families away to what would become permanent exile in Berlin, Prague and Paris. Lesley Chamberlain creates a rich portrait of this chilling historical moment, evoked with immediacy through the journals, letters, and memoirs of the exiles.

Rilke: The Last Inward Man
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 256

Rilke: The Last Inward Man

An incisive and intimate account of the life and work of the great poet Rilke, exploring the rich interior world he created in his poetry When Rilke died in 1926, his reputation as a great poet seemed secure. But as the tide of the critical avant-garde turned, he was increasingly dismissed as apolitical, the angels and roses of his poems deemed irrelevant. In Rilke: The Last Inward Man, acclaimed writer Lesley Chamberlain uses this charge as the starting point from which to explore the expansiveness of the inner world Rilke created in his poetry. Weaving together searching insights on Rilke's life, work, and reputation, Chamberlain casts the poet's inwardness as a profound response to a world that seemed to be losing its spirituality. In works of dazzling imagination and rich imagery, Rilke sought to restore value to Western materialism, encouraging not narrow introversion but the cultivation of a new sensibility in a secular world after the death of God.

Street Life and Morals
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 240

Street Life and Morals

With resonance for today, this book explores a significant crisis of German philosophy and national identity in the decades around World War II. German philosophy, famed for its high-minded Idealism, was plunged into crisis when Germany became an urban and industrial society in the late nineteenth century. The key figure of this shift was Immanuel Kant: seen for a century as the philosophical father of the nation, Kant seemed to lack crucial answers for violent and impersonal modern times. This book shows that the social and intellectual crisis that overturned Germany’s traditions—a sense of profound spiritual confusion over where modern society was headed—was the same crisis that allowed Hitler to come to power. It also describes how German philosophers actively struggled to create a new kind of philosophy in an effort to understand social incoherence and technology’s diminishing of the individual.

Nietzsche in Turin
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 289

Nietzsche in Turin

Beautifully packaged reissue of the vividly lyrical biography of Nietzsche that John Banville called 'a major intellectual event' In 1888, philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche moved to Turin. This would be the year in which he wrote three of his greatest works: Twilight of the Idols, The Antichrist, and Ecce Homo; it would also be his last year of writing. He suffered a debilitating nervous breakdown in the first days of the following year. In this probing, elegant biography of that pivotal year, Lesley Chamberlain undoes popular clichés and misconceptions about Nietzsche by offering a deeply complex approach to his character and work. Focusing as much on Nietzsche's daily habits, anxieties and insecurities as on the development of his philosophy, Nietzsche in Turin offers a uniquely lively portrait of the great thinker, and of the furiously productive days that preceded his decline.

A Shoe Story
  • Language: en

A Shoe Story

  • Categories: Art
  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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