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Reclaiming Our Brains without Losing Our Minds relates the story of a group of women in Yakima, Washington, who form a reading discussion group. Over the course of twenty-nine years, the women hone their minds, exchange ideas, and discover a sense of community that extends beyond the page.
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Reclaiming Our Brains without Losing Our Minds relates the story of a group of women in Yakima, Washington, who form a reading discussion group. Over the course of twenty-nine years, the women hone their minds, exchange ideas, and discover a sense of community that extends beyond the page.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Globe Pequot Publishing Group Inc/Bloomsbury
- Seitenzahl: 226
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. November 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 335g
- ISBN-13: 9780761862376
- ISBN-10: 0761862374
- Artikelnr.: 39712394
- Verlag: Globe Pequot Publishing Group Inc/Bloomsbury
- Seitenzahl: 226
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. November 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 335g
- ISBN-13: 9780761862376
- ISBN-10: 0761862374
- Artikelnr.: 39712394
Inga Wiehl holds a PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of Washington.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS INTRODUCTION Part I: Reclaiming Our Brains 1 We Become a
Reading Group: How and Why 2 The Kind of Books We Read and the Way We
Choose Them 3 From Lunch to Lecture: Why Do We Keep Coming Back? Part II:
Responses to Books We Have Read 4 Mutations of the Novel Over Time: From
Boccaccio's Decameron to Lessing's The Golden Notebook 5 From Poem to
Novel: Dante Then and Now-The Inferno and The Dante Conspiracy 6
Verisimilitude in the Historical Novel: Alessandro Manzoni's The Betrothed
7 Every Novel Has a Clock: Reeds in the Wind, The House by the Medlar Tree,
and The Leopard 8 Looking at the Invisible with Italo Calvino 9 Life is
Short but Long on Zest in Stendhal's Charterhouse of Parma 10 Buddenbrooks:
The Ordinary Novel 11 No Rest Cure for Readers on the Magic Mountain 12 On
Holiday with Felix Krull vi Reclaiming Our Brains Without Losing Our Minds
13 Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago and the Horsemen of the Apocalypse 14
Sholokhov's Quiet Flows the Don: A Novel of War and Peace 15 Solzhenitsyn's
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich: Learning to Want the Inexhaustible
16 A Doris Lessing Debut: The Grass Is Singing, and We Sing With It 17
Getting What We Want or Wanting What We Get: Does J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace
Have a Happy Ending? 18 Unlived Lives and Our Roles in Perpetrating Them 19
"I can't see where I am going. My life finished. It spoil. It spoil": V. S.
Naipaul's Vision of survivors in Post- Colonial Worlds 20 Well Lived Lives
and the Costs They Exact: Guy De Maupassant and Isak Dinesen 21 Emigrants
in "The Golden Land" 22 Emigrant or Immigrant: A Challenge for Giants 23
The Costs of Building the Soria Moria Castle 24 The [Tainted] Vision of
Emma Blau 25 From Jyoti to Jasmine, Jase, Jane, and Jase Again: A Journey
of Transformations 26 Self-Help and Other-Help: A Means to an End 27 More
Responses to Our Study of Immigrant Novels 28 Migrants in Search of Kinder
Suns 29 Uncle Tom's Cabin: A Novel of Homecoming Appendix 1: Thursday
Readers by Correspondence Appendix 2: The Books We Have Read Bibliography
Reading Group: How and Why 2 The Kind of Books We Read and the Way We
Choose Them 3 From Lunch to Lecture: Why Do We Keep Coming Back? Part II:
Responses to Books We Have Read 4 Mutations of the Novel Over Time: From
Boccaccio's Decameron to Lessing's The Golden Notebook 5 From Poem to
Novel: Dante Then and Now-The Inferno and The Dante Conspiracy 6
Verisimilitude in the Historical Novel: Alessandro Manzoni's The Betrothed
7 Every Novel Has a Clock: Reeds in the Wind, The House by the Medlar Tree,
and The Leopard 8 Looking at the Invisible with Italo Calvino 9 Life is
Short but Long on Zest in Stendhal's Charterhouse of Parma 10 Buddenbrooks:
The Ordinary Novel 11 No Rest Cure for Readers on the Magic Mountain 12 On
Holiday with Felix Krull vi Reclaiming Our Brains Without Losing Our Minds
13 Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago and the Horsemen of the Apocalypse 14
Sholokhov's Quiet Flows the Don: A Novel of War and Peace 15 Solzhenitsyn's
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich: Learning to Want the Inexhaustible
16 A Doris Lessing Debut: The Grass Is Singing, and We Sing With It 17
Getting What We Want or Wanting What We Get: Does J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace
Have a Happy Ending? 18 Unlived Lives and Our Roles in Perpetrating Them 19
"I can't see where I am going. My life finished. It spoil. It spoil": V. S.
Naipaul's Vision of survivors in Post- Colonial Worlds 20 Well Lived Lives
and the Costs They Exact: Guy De Maupassant and Isak Dinesen 21 Emigrants
in "The Golden Land" 22 Emigrant or Immigrant: A Challenge for Giants 23
The Costs of Building the Soria Moria Castle 24 The [Tainted] Vision of
Emma Blau 25 From Jyoti to Jasmine, Jase, Jane, and Jase Again: A Journey
of Transformations 26 Self-Help and Other-Help: A Means to an End 27 More
Responses to Our Study of Immigrant Novels 28 Migrants in Search of Kinder
Suns 29 Uncle Tom's Cabin: A Novel of Homecoming Appendix 1: Thursday
Readers by Correspondence Appendix 2: The Books We Have Read Bibliography
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS INTRODUCTION Part I: Reclaiming Our Brains 1 We Become a
Reading Group: How and Why 2 The Kind of Books We Read and the Way We
Choose Them 3 From Lunch to Lecture: Why Do We Keep Coming Back? Part II:
Responses to Books We Have Read 4 Mutations of the Novel Over Time: From
Boccaccio's Decameron to Lessing's The Golden Notebook 5 From Poem to
Novel: Dante Then and Now-The Inferno and The Dante Conspiracy 6
Verisimilitude in the Historical Novel: Alessandro Manzoni's The Betrothed
7 Every Novel Has a Clock: Reeds in the Wind, The House by the Medlar Tree,
and The Leopard 8 Looking at the Invisible with Italo Calvino 9 Life is
Short but Long on Zest in Stendhal's Charterhouse of Parma 10 Buddenbrooks:
The Ordinary Novel 11 No Rest Cure for Readers on the Magic Mountain 12 On
Holiday with Felix Krull vi Reclaiming Our Brains Without Losing Our Minds
13 Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago and the Horsemen of the Apocalypse 14
Sholokhov's Quiet Flows the Don: A Novel of War and Peace 15 Solzhenitsyn's
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich: Learning to Want the Inexhaustible
16 A Doris Lessing Debut: The Grass Is Singing, and We Sing With It 17
Getting What We Want or Wanting What We Get: Does J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace
Have a Happy Ending? 18 Unlived Lives and Our Roles in Perpetrating Them 19
"I can't see where I am going. My life finished. It spoil. It spoil": V. S.
Naipaul's Vision of survivors in Post- Colonial Worlds 20 Well Lived Lives
and the Costs They Exact: Guy De Maupassant and Isak Dinesen 21 Emigrants
in "The Golden Land" 22 Emigrant or Immigrant: A Challenge for Giants 23
The Costs of Building the Soria Moria Castle 24 The [Tainted] Vision of
Emma Blau 25 From Jyoti to Jasmine, Jase, Jane, and Jase Again: A Journey
of Transformations 26 Self-Help and Other-Help: A Means to an End 27 More
Responses to Our Study of Immigrant Novels 28 Migrants in Search of Kinder
Suns 29 Uncle Tom's Cabin: A Novel of Homecoming Appendix 1: Thursday
Readers by Correspondence Appendix 2: The Books We Have Read Bibliography
Reading Group: How and Why 2 The Kind of Books We Read and the Way We
Choose Them 3 From Lunch to Lecture: Why Do We Keep Coming Back? Part II:
Responses to Books We Have Read 4 Mutations of the Novel Over Time: From
Boccaccio's Decameron to Lessing's The Golden Notebook 5 From Poem to
Novel: Dante Then and Now-The Inferno and The Dante Conspiracy 6
Verisimilitude in the Historical Novel: Alessandro Manzoni's The Betrothed
7 Every Novel Has a Clock: Reeds in the Wind, The House by the Medlar Tree,
and The Leopard 8 Looking at the Invisible with Italo Calvino 9 Life is
Short but Long on Zest in Stendhal's Charterhouse of Parma 10 Buddenbrooks:
The Ordinary Novel 11 No Rest Cure for Readers on the Magic Mountain 12 On
Holiday with Felix Krull vi Reclaiming Our Brains Without Losing Our Minds
13 Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago and the Horsemen of the Apocalypse 14
Sholokhov's Quiet Flows the Don: A Novel of War and Peace 15 Solzhenitsyn's
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich: Learning to Want the Inexhaustible
16 A Doris Lessing Debut: The Grass Is Singing, and We Sing With It 17
Getting What We Want or Wanting What We Get: Does J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace
Have a Happy Ending? 18 Unlived Lives and Our Roles in Perpetrating Them 19
"I can't see where I am going. My life finished. It spoil. It spoil": V. S.
Naipaul's Vision of survivors in Post- Colonial Worlds 20 Well Lived Lives
and the Costs They Exact: Guy De Maupassant and Isak Dinesen 21 Emigrants
in "The Golden Land" 22 Emigrant or Immigrant: A Challenge for Giants 23
The Costs of Building the Soria Moria Castle 24 The [Tainted] Vision of
Emma Blau 25 From Jyoti to Jasmine, Jase, Jane, and Jase Again: A Journey
of Transformations 26 Self-Help and Other-Help: A Means to an End 27 More
Responses to Our Study of Immigrant Novels 28 Migrants in Search of Kinder
Suns 29 Uncle Tom's Cabin: A Novel of Homecoming Appendix 1: Thursday
Readers by Correspondence Appendix 2: The Books We Have Read Bibliography