Outsider at the Heart of Things

Outsider at the Heart of Things
Author: Richard P. Blackmur
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 312
Release: 1989
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 9780252015793

The Outsider

The Outsider
Author: Melinda Metz
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 178
Release: 2002-02-02
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0743434420

The acclaimed Roswell High series—and the inspiration for the Roswell, New Mexico TV series—returns with this new introduction, perfect for fans of Stranger Things and Riverdale. He’s not like other guys. Liz has seen him around school. It’s hard to miss Max—the tall, blond, blue-eyed senior stands out among all the other students at Roswell High. So why is he such a loner? Max is in love with Liz. He loves the way her eyes light up when she laughs and the way her long, black hair moves when she turns her head. Most of all, he loves to imagine what it would be like to kiss her. But he knows he can’t get too close. He can’t risk her discovering the truth about who he is—or what he is.... Because the truth could kill her.

Outsider Art

Outsider Art
Author: Daniel Wojcik
Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages: 598
Release: 2016-08-25
Genre: Art
ISBN: 149680807X

Outsider art has exploded onto the international art scene, gaining widespread attention for its startling originality and visual power. As an expression of raw creativity, outsider art remains associated with self-taught visionaries, psychiatric patients, trance mediums, eccentric outcasts, and unschooled artistic geniuses who create things outside of mainstream artistic trends and styles. Outsider Art: Visionary Worlds and Trauma provides a comprehensive guide through the contested terrain of outsider art and the related domains of art brut, visionary art, “art of the insane,” and folk art. The book examines the history and primary issues of the field as well as explores the intersection between culture and individual creativity that is at the very heart of outsider art definitions and debates. Daniel Wojcik's interdisciplinary study challenges prevailing assumptions about the idiosyncratic status of outsider artists. This wide-ranging investigation of the art and lives of those labeled outsiders focuses on the ways that personal tragedies and suffering have inspired the art-making process. In some cases, trauma has triggered a creative transformation that has helped artists confront otherwise overwhelming life events. Additionally, Wojcik's study illustrates how vernacular traditions, religious worldviews, ethnic heritage, and popular culture have influenced such art. With its detailed consideration of personal motivations, cultural milieu, and the potentially therapeutic aspects of art making, this volume provides a deeper understanding of the artistic impulse and human creativity.

Radical Empiricists

Radical Empiricists
Author: Helen Thaventhiran
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 285
Release: 2015-08-13
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0191061700

Radical Empiricists presents a new history of criticism in the first half of the twentieth-century, against the backdrop of the modernist crisis of meaning. Our received idea of modernist criticism is that its novelty lay in being very empirical: critics believed in looking closely at words on the page. Such close reading has since been easy to ridicule but my book seeks to consider whether this is fair: have we, in the rush either to dismiss, or even to defend, the idea of close reading, often failed to look closely at what it involves in practice? Against this oversight, Radical Empiricists turns close reading back on itself, proposing some innovative readings of the prose of five major modernist poet-critics: I.A. Richards, T.S. Eliot, William Empson, R.P. Blackmur, and Marianne Moore. The book is divided into two parts, preceded by an introduction that explores what these five writers share: a radical self-consciousness about the key critical concept, 'meaning'. Part I, 'How to read', considers the prose techniques of Eliot, Richards and Empson as they push at the boundaries of verbal analysis in other disciplines: experimental psychology and anthropology, classical commentary and textual criticism. Part II introduces Blackmur and Moore, alongside Empson, and takes a more polemical look at how their critical styles defy various modernist orthodoxies about 'how not to read' (for example, that paraphrase always destroys poetic meaning). Many of these orthodoxies remain current: re-visiting their history, and attending to the rich detail of critical prose styles, can allow us to lift some old, unreflective constraints on our ways of knowing about poems.

Hearts, Strings, and Other Breakable Things

Hearts, Strings, and Other Breakable Things
Author: Jacqueline Firkins
Publisher: Clarion Books
Total Pages: 385
Release: 2019
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 1328635198

Living with her aunt's family in Mansfield, Massachusetts, for a few months before turning eighteen and starting college, Edie is torn between Sebastian, the boy next door, and playboy Henry.--

The Outsiders

The Outsiders
Author: S. E Hinton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 180
Release: 1967
Genre: Fugitives from justice
ISBN: 9780137012602

American and British Poetry: 1979-1990

American and British Poetry: 1979-1990
Author: Harriet Semmes Alexander
Publisher: Athens : Ohio University Press/Swallow Press
Total Pages: 488
Release: 1984
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN:

Includes approximately 800 British and American poets, past and present, with criticisms drawn from more than 160 journals and 300 books

The Outsider

The Outsider
Author: Penelope Williamson
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 576
Release: 2014-06-24
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1476731012

In 1880s Montana, wounded gunfighter Johnny Cain finds refuge on a sheep farm run by Rachel Yoder, an Amish widow with a small son whose husband was framed and hung. As Cain recovers under Rachel's care, love is born.

The Outsider

The Outsider
Author: Frederick Forsyth
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 354
Release: 2015-10-06
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0698407121

From Frederick Forsyth, the grand master of international suspense, comes his most intriguing story ever—his own. For more than forty years, Frederick Forsyth has been writing extraordinary real-world novels of intrigue, from the groundbreaking The Day of the Jackal to the prescient The Kill List. Whether writing about the murky world of arms dealers, the shadowy Nazi underground movement, or the intricacies of worldwide drug cartels, every plot has been chillingly plausible because every detail has been minutely researched. But what most people don’t know is that some of his greatest stories of intrigue have been in his own life. He was the RAF’s youngest pilot at the age of nineteen, barely escaped the wrath of an arms dealer in Hamburg, got strafed by a MiG during the Nigerian civil war, landed during a bloody coup in Guinea-Bissau (and was accused of helping fund a 1973 coup in Equatorial Guinea). The Stasi arrested him, the Israelis feted him, the IRA threatened him, and a certain attractive Czech secret police agent—well, her actions were a bit more intimate. And that’s just for starters. It is a memoir like no other—and a book of pure delight.