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Book
Cantigas : Galician-Portuguese troubadour poems
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ISBN: 0691207410 Year: 2022 Publisher: Princeton, N. J. : Princeton University Press,

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Abstract

"Cantigas are lyric poems in Galician-Portuguese, a language of the Iberian Peninsula, written and performed during the 13th and early 14th centuries. They are divided into three major genres: cantigas de amigo (songs in the voice of women), cantigas de amore (courtly love songs in the voice of men), and cantigas de escarho e mal dizer (joke and insult poetry). The cantigas de amigo, thought to be inspired by popular and indigenous women's songs, represent the largest body of woman-voiced poetry in Europe, although the surviving compositions are attributed to male poets. In this book, the award-winning translator Richard Zenith has revised, expanded, and retitled a volume of cantigas he first published in 1995, in the UK only, with Carcanet Press (113 Galician Portuguese Troubadour Poems, now OP). The new book includes 122 cantigas, including several new translations, with the original text on facing pages, and a new introduction to provide background and context"--

Keywords

Portuguese poetry --- Songs, Portuguese --- Adjective. --- Airas Nunes. --- Albigensian Crusade. --- Alfonso X of Castile. --- Another Girl. --- Arabic. --- Aristocracy. --- Awareness. --- Bertran de Born. --- Cantiga de amigo. --- Cantiga. --- Cantigas de Santa Maria. --- Cantigas. --- Castile (historical region). --- Castilian Spanish. --- Catharism. --- Convulsion. --- Copyist. --- Count of Barcelos. --- Critical edition (opera). --- Edition (book). --- Emotion. --- Erysipelas. --- Ezra Pound. --- Fee tail. --- Feeling. --- Ferdinand III of Castile. --- From a Distance. --- Frustration. --- Fungus. --- Galicia (Eastern Europe). --- Galicia (Spain). --- Galician language. --- Galician-Portuguese. --- Galicians. --- Gautier de Coincy. --- Genre. --- Glossary. --- Holy Roman Emperor. --- Impossibility. --- In Battle. --- Individualism. --- Internal rhyme. --- Kharja. --- Kingdom of Galicia. --- Lament. --- Leitmotif. --- Literature. --- Lyric poetry. --- Lyricist. --- Majorat. --- Marcabru. --- Melodic (magazine). --- Mendes. --- Modern English. --- Moors. --- Music Is. --- Musical notation. --- My Way. --- Narrative. --- Nobility. --- Obscenity. --- Occitan language. --- Occitania. --- Occitans. --- On the Third Day. --- Panegyric. --- Peire Vidal. --- Perfect rhyme. --- Philip Glass. --- Pity. --- Poetry. --- Portuguese people. --- Pronunciation. --- Punctuation. --- Refrain. --- Rhyme scheme. --- Rhyme. --- Richard Sieburth. --- Sadness. --- Sensibility. --- Sicilian School. --- Singing. --- Snake venom. --- Southern France. --- Stanza. --- Strophe. --- Strophic form. --- Supplication. --- The Other Hand. --- The World at Large. --- Toxin. --- Troubadour. --- Ulcer (dermatology). --- Uncertainty. --- Unrequited love. --- Usage. --- Vasco Martins. --- Vatican Library. --- Vejer de la Frontera.


Book
Paul Laurence Dunbar : the life and times of a caged bird
Author:
ISBN: 0691235155 Year: 2022 Publisher: Princeton, N. J. : Princeton University Press,

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"This biography explores the life of Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872-1906), a major nineteenth-century American poet and one of the first African American writers to garner international attention and praise in the wake of emancipation. While Dunbar is perhaps best known for poems such as "Sympathy" (a poem that ends "I know why the caged bird sings!") and "We Wear the Mask," he wrote prolifically in many genres, including a newspaper he produced with his friends Orville and Wilbur Wright in their hometown of Dayton, Ohio. Before his early death he published fourteen books of poetry, four collections of short stories, and four novels, and also collaborated on theatrical productions, including the first musical with a full African American cast to appear on Broadway. In this book, Gene Jarrett traces Dunbar's personal and professional life in the context of the historical currents that shaped the author's development-to tell, in Jarrett's words, "the full story of an African American who privately wrestled with the constraints of America in the Gilded Age, but who also sought to express or mitigate this strife through the written and spoken word." Jarrett sketches the life and times of Paul Laurence Dunbar in three main parts. Against the backdrop of the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the rise of Jim Crow segregation, the first section, "Broken Home," begins with the lives of Joshua and Matilda, Paul's parents, who were born enslaved, and ends with the years leading up to 1893, when Dunbar published his first book, Oak and Ivy, and befriended Frederick Douglass. The second section, "A True Singer," bookends the era when Paul entered his literary prime and became one of the first professional African American writers. The final section, "The Downward Way," details his troubled marriage to Alice Dunbar-Nelson, his illnesses, including tuberculosis and alcoholism, and his death. An epilogue comments on Dunbar's enduring legacy. The book includes more than 40 black-and-white photographs of Dunbar's family, friends, colleagues, and published works"--

Keywords

Poets, American --- Dunbar, Paul Laurence, --- Adjudication. --- Admiration. --- Admonition. --- African Americans. --- After Alice. --- Albery Allson Whitman. --- Alley. --- Amendment. --- Arid. --- Benjamin Butler (politician). --- Black Boy. --- Bondage (BDSM). --- Career. --- Civil ceremony. --- Cleveland Public Library. --- Code of conduct. --- Comedy of manners. --- Congregational church. --- Disgust. --- E. J. Pennington. --- Environmental determinism. --- Ephraim Chambers. --- Essay. --- Evocation. --- Faith in Christianity. --- Fears (Modern Family). --- Folklore. --- Foot (prosody). --- Gabion. --- Generosity. --- Henry David Thoreau. --- Her Story (video game). --- History. --- Homer Plessy. --- Ian Maclaren. --- Imagination. --- Impartiality. --- Indiana University Press. --- Infatuation. --- Introspection. --- James Whitcomb Riley. --- Laughter. --- Law of the United States. --- Leon Edel. --- Lodging. --- Longevity. --- Lyricist. --- Mary Church Terrell. --- Medical diagnosis. --- Molding (decorative). --- Moncure D. Conway. --- Moral character. --- Mrs. --- Nausea. --- Novella. --- Ostracism. --- Out of Africa. --- Pathology. --- Paul Laurence Dunbar. --- Pauperism. --- Philosophy. --- Plantations in the American South. --- Poetry. --- Precinct. --- Prince Hamlet. --- Publicist. --- Racism. --- Regional language. --- Representative democracy. --- Republicanism. --- Rifts (role-playing game). --- Satire. --- Scholarship. --- Seclusion. --- Secrecy. --- Seminar. --- Sibling. --- Slavery. --- Social class. --- Socialite. --- Sock. --- Speak to Me. --- Statute. --- Suffrage. --- Symptom. --- The Man with the Hoe. --- The Scarlet Letter. --- The Signifying Monkey. --- The Souls of Black Folk. --- Timothy Thomas Fortune. --- Two Kinds. --- United States Constitution. --- University of California. --- University of Pennsylvania Press. --- Village. --- West Africa. --- William Dean Howells. --- Writing. --- Year. --- Zola (musician).

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