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Two Women
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 453

Two Women

Sylvie Lemercier is an intelligent, attractive, and "sportive" forty-year-old whose husband, Nicholas, has just been murdered. Born in rural New Zealand, she retains something of an appealing naivete distilled by a discerning mind. But after his death, Sylvie discovers, with reluctant fascination, more about Nicholas than she ever could have imagined. Nicholas and Sylvie meet the day the Berlin Wall came down when Sylvie was only twenty-one. "Her mind coveted the new politics as much as her body yearned for sexual adventure. Sylvie's optimistic sense of history had not yet ripened into any kind of caution. A sense of longing that she couldn't quite comprehend conspired with the moment. She w...

Ha!
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 895

Ha!

On 15 March 1977, with his wife's consent, celebrated writer and former terrorist Hubert Aquin blew his brains out on the grounds of a Montreal convent school. Shocked by this self-murder, a filmmaker friend feels compelled to understand why Aquin killed himself - and discovers, at the heart of the tragedy, an unforgettable love story. A "documentary fiction" - a category which includes In Cold Blood and The Executioner's Song - HA! is a seminal work that reinvents the audio-visual revolution of the last century. Interweaving photographs, documents, and images with testimony from Aquin's friends and contemporaries, Aquin himself, and the writers and artists who influenced him, this intriguing novel takes the reader on a Joycean tour of a metropolis in the midst of political and cultural turmoil.

L'illustration
  • Language: fr
  • Pages: 630

L'illustration

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1899
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Hamlet's Twin
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 258

Hamlet's Twin

Written as a screenplay, Hamlet’s Twin chronicles the unusual honeymoon of a contemporary young couple, Nicholas and Sylvie Vanhesse, as they travel to Norway, and, eventually, to a mythical archipelago near the North Pole. Nicholas, while playing Fortinbras in a television production of Hamlet, becomes obsessed with the thought that Fortinbras was Hamlet’s estranged twin. His trip to Norway becomes a symbolic journey towards claiming his own rights and achieving his own revenge. Hubert Aquin’s Hamlet’s Twin is as tragic and as full of self-conscious riddles as its namesake.

Sylvie
  • Language: fr
  • Pages: 42

Sylvie

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1900
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Licensing Loyalty
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 314

Licensing Loyalty

In Licensing Loyalty, historian Jane McLeod explores the evolution of the idea that the royal government of eighteenth-century France had much to fear from the rise of print culture. She argues that early modern French printers helped foster this view as they struggled to negotiate a place in the expanding bureaucratic apparatus of the French state. Printers in the provinces and in Paris relentlessly lobbied the government, hoping to convince authorities that printing done by their commercial rivals posed a serious threat to both monarchy and morality. By examining the French state’s policy of licensing printers and the mutually influential relationships between officials and printers, McLeod sheds light on our understanding of the limits of French absolutism and the uses of print culture in the political life of provincial France.

Rural Granaries in Northern Gaul (Sixth Century BCE – Fourth Century CE)
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 194

Rural Granaries in Northern Gaul (Sixth Century BCE – Fourth Century CE)

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2019-03-27
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  • Publisher: BRILL

In recent years, storage has come to the fore as a central aspect of ancient economies. However studies have hitherto focused on urban and military storage. Although archaeological excavations of rural granaries are numerous, their evidence has yet to be fully taken into account. Such is the ambition of Rural Granaries in Northern Gaul (Sixth Century BCE – Fourth Century CE). Focusing on northern Gaul, this volume starts by discussing at length the possibility of quantifying storage capacities and, through them, agrarian production. Building on this first part, the second half of the book sketches the evolution of rural storage in Gaul from the Iron Age to Late Antiquity, setting firmly archaeological evidence in the historical context of the Roman Empire.

Experimentation in the Sciences
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 151

Experimentation in the Sciences

None

The Mandate of Heaven
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 335

The Mandate of Heaven

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2019-10-07
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  • Publisher: BRILL

The Mandate of Heaven examines the first European version of Sunzi’s Art of War, which was translated from Chinese by Joseph Amiot, a French missionary in Beijing, and published in Paris in 1772. His work is presented in English for the first time. Amiot undertook this project following the suppression of the Society of Jesus in France with the aim of demonstrating the value of the China mission to the French government. He addressed his work to Henri Bertin, minister of state, beginning a thirty-year correspondence between the two men. Amiot framed his translation in order to promote a radical agenda using the Chinese doctrine of the “mandate of heaven.” This was picked up within the sinophile and radical circle of the physiocrats, who promoted China as a model for revolution in Europe. The work also arrived just as the concept of strategy was emerging in France. Thus Amiot’s Sunzi can be placed among seminal developments in European political and strategic thought on the eve of the revolutionary era.