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Philip Mosley

    Resuming Maurice
    Split Screen
    Telling of the Anthracite
    • Telling of the Anthracite

      A Pennsylvania Posthistory

      • 250bladzijden
      • 9 uur lezen

      This is the first book about how the Pennsylvania anthracite story is told in the postindustrial age, and it places this discourse in the broader context of environmental and socioeconomic change. It is a work of regional history that is scholarly in tone yet written in a style accessible to the general reader. It explores the various ways in which anthracite history has been represented and remembered since 1960, the chosen date for the start of the "posthistorical" era coinciding approximately with the Knox mine disaster (1959) and the beginning of the Centralia mine fire (1962-), two cataclysmic and fateful events that symbolize the beginning of the end for widescale deep anthracite mining in northeastern Pennsylvania. An original work of historical analysis, the book cannot be compared directly to others in the field, since it is believed to be the only one of its kind. Though much anthracite historiography and related cultural activity exists, this book offers a comprehensive overview of the field. The purpose is to draw together the multifarious strands that make up the fabric of anthracite history in the present day. It is aimed a general audience interested in the subject but not necessarily in a specialized way. Moreover, the author shares his passionate interest in the subject.

      Telling of the Anthracite
    • Split Screen

      Belgian Cinema and Cultural Identity

      • 267bladzijden
      • 10 uur lezen

      The book offers an in-depth examination of Belgian cinema, highlighting its unique history shaped by linguistic divisions and cultural identity challenges. It discusses the critical yet overlooked contributions of notable filmmakers and the impact of state intervention on film production. The study traces the evolution of Belgian cinema, including its documentary, animation, and colonial film traditions, while addressing the broader political and economic changes in Europe that have influenced its current standing in both national and international contexts.

      Split Screen
    • A collection of essays with the unifying theme of literary celebrity and its discontents, on Vita Sackville West, Whitwell Elwin, George Barker, John Seymour, Virginia Haggard, J. K. Nettlefold, Dylan Thomas, Ned Washington, Maurice Maeterlinck, Karen Blixen, Octavio Paz, Rosario Castellanos and Ngugi wa Thiong'o.

      Resuming Maurice