Tag: heroines

Heroines of the Holocaust


Free Download Lori R. Weintrob, "Heroines of the Holocaust "
English | ISBN: 1032536624 | 2024 | 336 pages | EPUB | 2 MB
This book brings together international scholars to examine and share new approaches in the history of women’s rescue and resistance during the Holocaust and the Armenian and Rwandan genocide.

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Freedom Heroines


Free Download Frieda Wishinsky, "Freedom Heroines"
English | 2012 | pages: 144 | ISBN: 0545425182 | EPUB | 30,9 mb
There are six bios in one in this full-color series!

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The Heroines of Henry Longfellow Domestic, Defiant, Divine


Free Download Timothy E.G. Bartel, "The Heroines of Henry Longfellow: Domestic, Defiant, Divine"
English | ISBN: 1666913065 | 2022 | 134 pages | EPUB, PDF | 441 KB + 2 MB
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s poems are filled with powerful heroines, from Evangeline, the exiled wanderer, to Vittoria Colonna, the aging genius of the Italian renaissance. In The Heroines of Henry Longfellow: Domestic, Defiant, Divine, Timothy E. G. Bartel provides a survey of Longfellow’s major heroines, placing them in the context of Longfellow’s body of work and the poet’s interests in theology, politics, and history. Though Longfellow’s heroines have sometimes been dismissed as mere domestic caricatures, Bartel argues that Longfellow’s heroines are nothing of the sort. Instead, they provide us with unique pictures of how one’s individual talents and desires can be harmonized with the Christian ideals of communal justice, ethical living, and ultimate union with the Divine.

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Ovid’s Heroines


Free Download Clare Pollard, "Ovid’s Heroines"
English | 2013 | pages: 112 | ISBN: 1852249765 | EPUB | 0,3 mb
Ovid’s Heroides, written in Rome some time between 25 and 16 BC, was once his most popular work. The title translates as Heroines, and it’s a series of poems in the voices of women from Greek and Roman myth – including Phaedra, Medea, Penelope and Ariadne – addressed to the men they love. It has been claimed as both the first book of dramatic monologues and the first of epistolary fiction. It’s also a radical text in its literary transvestism, and the way it often presents the same story from very different, subjective perspectives. For a long time it was Ovid’s most influential work, loved by Chaucer, Dante, Marlowe, Shakespeare and Donne, and translated by Dryden and Pope. Clare Pollard’s new translation rediscovers Ovid’s Heroines for the 21st century, with a cast of women who are brave, bitchy, sexy, suicidal, horrifying, heartbreaking and surprisingly modern. Two of the most popular poetry books of recent times have been Ted Hughes’s new version of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, and Carol Ann Duffy’s The World’s Wife, dramatic monologues by women from myth and history giving their side of the story. Clare Pollard’s new take on Ovid’s Heroines is another book in that vein, bringing classic tales to life for modern readers.

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