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Literature Students Survival Kit - by Ian Littlewood (Paperback)

Literature Students Survival Kit - by  Ian Littlewood (Paperback)
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Last Price: 28.00 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>Who was Jezebel? What was the Wooden Horse? When was the Enlightenment? Who were the Luddites? And what is blank verse? <i>The Literature Student's Survival Kit</i> gives students about to embark on a literature degree all the background information they need to stay afloat. <br /> <ul> <li>Designed to help literature students stay afloat in their studies<br /> </li> <li>Brings together the biblical, classical, historical and academic information that literature students need<br /> </li> <li>Provides an overview of the Bible, its books, characters, episodes and places.<br /> </li> <li>Contains a guide to classical mythology<br /> </li> <li>Features timelines that situate literary figures in relation to historical events and key social, cultural and linguistic changes<br /> </li> <li>Presents essential information on individuals, events, movements, and concepts that had an impact on the literature of each period<br /> </li> <li>Includes glossaries of literary and critical terms, and a list of key literary critics<br /> </li> <li>Offers advice on how to write essays and how to avoid common linguistic and stylistic errors<br /> </li> <li>Enables students to approach their studies with self-assurance.</li> </ul><p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br>Who was Absalom? What was Deism? When was the Industrial Revolution? How do you tell a strong rhyme from a weak? And what do you do when panic sets in at the approach of exams? <br /> <p><i>The Literature Student's Survival Kit</i> gives students embarking on a literature degree all the background information they need to stay afloat. It brings together the essential biblical, classical, historical, and academic material in a one-stop reference book that includes: <br /> </p> <ul> <br /> </li> <li>An overview of the Bible, its books, characters, episodes, and places.<br /> </li> <li>A guide to classical mythology<br /> </li> <li>Timelines that situate literary figures in relation to historical events and key social, cultural, and linguistic changes<br /> </li> <li>Information on individuals, events, movements, and concepts that had an impact on the literature of each period<br /> </li> <li>A glossary of literary terms, with a separate section on poetry<br /> </li> <li>Advice on how to handle essays and exams at university level.</li> </ul> <br /> <p>Written in a clear and accessible style, <i>The Literature Student's Survival Kit</i> will enable students to approach their studies with confidence.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>What do Shadrach, Meshach, Abdegno and the Private of the Buffs have in common? What are Tabitha or Hecuba for you? When did the Porteous riots begin, when was the hearth tax abandoned? Littlewood's <i>Survival Kit</i> provides all the answers to similar vexing questions, queries that students and teachers alike won't have time to "google" accurately. This is the best and most up-to-date compendium of essential facts drawn from Biblical lore, universal history, literary chronologies, lists of tropes and poetic movements...a desperately needed survival kit for those who face our current mixture of information overload and short term memory. <br /> <i>J.M. Rabaté, University of Pennsylvania</i> <br /> <p>The Literature Student's Survival Kit is a remarkably useful collection of information of sure value to many students of literature. Written in a measured way, it presents with both clarity and grace a wide but manageable range of knowledge--historical, political, cultural, biographical, mythological, theological--that will help open up the textures of literary texts, past and present, for readers without that information already at their fingertips. Littlewood's text offers the kind of knowledge--accessibly laid out, accessibly written--that a reader so often needs to know in order to enable informed and sensitive literary interpretation. A book not only valuable but enjoyable too.<br /> <i>Francis O'Gorman, University of Leeds</i><br /> </p> <p>"This is exactly the kind of book I wish I'd had as a student. It introduces and explains the unfamiliar: the Bible, classics, history. A remarkable combination of explanation, encyclopedia, glossary and database--an indispensable vade mecum. It contains fascinating insights as well as useful facts. How can a reference work be so readable?"<br /> <i>Laurie Maguire, University of Oxford</i><br /> </p> <p>This really is a remarkably useful little book.<br /> <i>Reference Reviews</i></p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Ian Littlewood</b> has taught for many years at the University of Sussex as well as at universities in France, America and Japan. He is the author of a number of books on literature, travel and history, including <i>The Writings of Evelyn Waugh</i> (1983), literary guides to Paris and Venice (1987 and 1991), <i>The Idea of Japan </i>(1996), <i>Sultry Climates </i>(2001) and the Rough Guide<i> History of France</i> (2002).

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