维特根斯坦 一本小书,道尽天才传奇的一生!语言精练,轻松易读;翻阅书中的珍贵图片,一览当时的社会生活。
我们不能言说的,就保持沉默。
¥47.50定价:¥59.00 (8.06折)
Poet's Choice(ISBN=9780156032674)
¥69.00
本次为A .E 豪斯曼诗集双语对照本首度出版。 他的诗作影响了中国新诗运动,闻一多、梁实秋、杨宪益等都推荐过他,但他的作品集却鲜少在国内翻译出版。本次精选豪斯曼的具代表性的诗作,无论是原诗还是译作,都可读性极强,是人们了解、研究豪斯曼诗歌艺术不可错过的读物。 由于豪斯曼的诗歌形式整齐,韵律感强,国内*早译介豪斯曼的是新文化运动中的格律派诗人闻一多。 闻一多力倡建立现代格律诗,指出新格律诗不仅要摄取传统格律诗的精髓,还要借鉴西方诗歌的长处,尤其是格律方面的长处。 事实上,闻一多在芝加哥珂泉留学时就已成了豪斯曼的诗中的音韵魅力的俘虏,在其后的新诗创作和对新诗理论的构建的思索中,闻一多都从豪斯曼的诗歌中获益良多。 此后许多翻译名家如梁实秋、卞之琳、杨宪益、飞白、周煦良等人都译介过他。可
¥49.90定价:¥49.90
How to Read a Poem(ISBN=9780156005661)
How to Read a Poem is an unprecedented exploration of poetryand feeling. In language at once acute and emotional, distinguishedpoet and critic Edward Hirsch describes why poetry matters and howwe can open up our imaginations so that its message can make adifference. In a marvelous reading of verse from around the world,including work by Pablo Neruda, Elizabeth Bishop, Wallace Stevens,and Sylvia Plath, among many others, Hirsch discovers the truemeaning of their words and ideas and brings their sublime messagehome into our hearts. A masterful work by a master poet, thisbrilliant summation of poetry and human nature will speak to allreaders who long to place poetry in their lives.
¥58.50
The Myth of the Eastern Front(ISBN=9780521712316)
¥183.60
Looking Backward 2000-1887(Signet Classic)《回顾:2000-1887》
¥13.00
作者介绍:Edward Baugh Edward Baugh is Emeritus Professor of English at the University of the West Indies.
¥700.50
¥37.00
¥63.40
INOUE: Izu Dancer & Other Stories 伊豆舞女及其他故事 (ISBN 9784805307
¥113.50
"They call it the free market, but that is shorthand for much more than the freedom to buy and sell. What they celebrate, preach, and demand is private enterprise liberated from government regulation, unchecked by effective trade unions, unfettered by sentimental concerns over the fate of employees or communities, unrestrained by customs barriers or investment restrictions, and molested as little as possible by taxation. What they insistently demand is the privatization of state-owned businesses of all kind and the conversion of public institutions from universities and botanical gardens to prisons, from libraries and schools to old-age homes into private enterprises run for profit. What they promise is more dynamic economy that will generate new wealth--while saying nothing about the distribution of any wealth, old or new. They call it the free market, but I call it turbo-capitalism because it is so profoundly different from the strictly controlled capitalism that flourished from 1945 until the 1980s, and th
¥57.20