New Books April 2020

Whilst the EFL is closed to readers, the library has been expanding its access to e-books. This post will explore some of the newest e-book acquisitions from the past month. The selection focused on are recent publications on a variety of subjects.

Alexandra Socarides. 2020. In Plain Sight: Nineteenth-Century American Women’s Poetry and the Problem of Literary History.
Recently acquired are several new e-books from the Oxford Scholarship Online series. From this series, Socarides’ In Plain Sight focuses on the erasure of female American poets from the nineteenth-century literary history. Socarides also explores why only Emily Dickinson’s work was remembered. The book analyses the conventions of American women’s poetry and how it was circulated, and how this influenced the erasure of their work.

Erin A. McCarthy. 2020. Doubtful Readers: Print, Poetry, and the Reading Public in Early Modern England.
Another new addition from the Oxford Scholarship Online series is McCarthy’s work Doubtful Readers. The work focuses on the print and publication of early modern poetry. It explores how publishers attempted to make work more accessible to readers who had been restricted by social circles in manuscript. McCarthy considers how poetry was shaped by printing traditions, and itself shaped by these traditions. The book demonstrates how the actions of publishers during this period had a longstanding impact on texts and literary histories.

Megan Cavell & Jennifer Neville (eds.). 2020. Riddles at work in the early medieval tradition: words, ideas, interactions.
Riddles at work
features a variety of writers who examine the poetic tradition of riddles in Early Medieval England and its neighbours. Riddles are treated individually and as part of a larger culture. Through examining riddles both in Latin and Old English, new ways to consider riddles are highlighted. A variety of themes and approaches are considered in Riddles at work to demonstrate that there is no right way to read riddles, resultantly, there are many interesting approaches which can be taken.

Madeleine Callaghan & Anthony Howe (eds.) 2020. Romanticism and the letter.
Romanticism and the letter
explores letter writing in Britain during the Romantic period. It contains essays from a range of contributors, who focus on a variety of topics including theories of letter writing, epistolary culture and specific authors including Wordsworth, Austen, Shelley and Byron. The work demonstrates how the usage of letters varies for individual writers and letters. It also shows how letters present interesting insights into the culture of the Romantic period.

Sandie Byrne. 2020. Poetry and class.
In this study, Byrne explores how class is represented in English poetry from the fourteenth century to present day through specific case studies. Byrne uses examples from all class levels, whilst also examining dialect and accent to explore how the role of class influenced production and reception of poetry. The work explores the factors which enable and obstruct the production of poetry such as patronage, print and education.

 

Barry Ahearn. 2020. Pound, Frost, Moore, and poetic precision: science in modernist American poetry.
Ahearn’s study examines the work of three American poets, Pound, Frost and Moore alongside the demand that poetry should aspire to maintain scientific precision. Through analysing the varying individual approach to this demand by each poet Ahearn explores how this influenced other areas of culture and twentieth-century modern American literature.

 

The full list of new e-books can be found on the new digital book display on the EFL LibraryThing catalogue which highlights the newest acquisitions: https://www.librarything.com/catalog/EFLOxford. The digital display is updated regularly with links through to the e-books, and the list can be refined by topics and series. In addition, you can continue to recommend and request books using our form at: https://www.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/english/collections/recommendations.

EFL New Books January: Film Studies & Hollywood

This post will highlight some of the recent books the EFL has received with a focus on film studies.

New to the EFL are two books by Patrick Keating which focus on the technical elements of film and how they shape Hollywood film. Hollywood Lighting (2014) explores the role of lighting in Hollywood films from the silent period to film noir and how it performs essential functions within the films. It also considers how lighting was used when handling challenges in relation to specific films such as Girl Shy (1924) and Anna Karenina (1935).  The Dynamic Frame (2019) examines the history of camera movement and how it was used to enrich stories and shape the Hollywood style. Keating also explores technological advancements and how this created new possibilities for cinematography, as well as the changing cultural contexts which provided new inspiration for filmmakers.

Another new book focusing on Hollywood film is Stanley Cavell and the Magic of Hollywood Films by Daniel Shaw (2019). The book examines the American philosophical foundations of Hollywood film through the work of the American philosopher Cavell. Shaw considers the work of Cavell and how the philosophical influences of Emerson and Thoreau shaped his thoughts concerning film and his belief that the greatest Hollywood films depict the struggle to become who we really are. Shaw applies these theories to interpret a range of films.

Also new to the EFL is an interdisciplinary approach to African American Film, African America Cinema Through Black Lives Consciousness (2019). The authors of the chapters in this anthology of essays use critical race theory to discuss contemporary issues in relation to American film, with a focus on race, sexuality, class and gender. The book embraces a range of social experiences to provide a varied approach to African American film.

 

Turning to British films, British Art Cinema (2019) focuses on British films and cultural history from the 20th century onwards, arguing that Britain has a long history of experiment and artistry beyond the mainstream films. Newland and Hoyle argue that whilst there is a long standing tradition within British art cinema, it is also a fluid concept with broader concerns in relation to the changing society and cultures.

 

Screening the Royal Shakespeare Company (2019) explores the history of Shakespeare’s adaptions and the involvement of the RSC in these adaptions, from on the screen from television adaptions to live cinema screenings. Wyver investigates questions of adaptation and how this influences those involved in the process. Wyver is a broadcasting historian, the television producer of Hamlet and of RSC Live from Stratford-upon-Avon. Therefore, through drawing on his experiences he so offers a vivid account.

 

These books can be found on the New Books Display for a short time, and are available to borrow. Please click on the images above to go to direct to the book on SOLO.

Find more new books related to film studies and Hollywood on the EFL LibraryThing with books tagged with film studies.