ورود به حساب

نام کاربری گذرواژه

گذرواژه را فراموش کردید؟ کلیک کنید

حساب کاربری ندارید؟ ساخت حساب

ساخت حساب کاربری

نام نام کاربری ایمیل شماره موبایل گذرواژه

برای ارتباط با ما می توانید از طریق شماره موبایل زیر از طریق تماس و پیامک با ما در ارتباط باشید


09117307688
09117179751

در صورت عدم پاسخ گویی از طریق پیامک با پشتیبان در ارتباط باشید

دسترسی نامحدود

برای کاربرانی که ثبت نام کرده اند

ضمانت بازگشت وجه

درصورت عدم همخوانی توضیحات با کتاب

پشتیبانی

از ساعت 7 صبح تا 10 شب

دانلود کتاب Routledge Library Editions: Wyndham Lewis

دانلود کتاب نسخه های کتابخانه روتلج: ویندهام لوئیس

Routledge Library Editions: Wyndham Lewis

مشخصات کتاب

Routledge Library Editions: Wyndham Lewis

دسته بندی: ادبیات
ویرایش:  
نویسندگان: , ,   
سری: Routledge Library Editions: Wyndham Lewis 
ISBN (شابک) : 9781032057255, 9781032118703 
ناشر: Routledge 
سال نشر: 2022 
تعداد صفحات: 1478 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 309 مگابایت 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 89,000



ثبت امتیاز به این کتاب

میانگین امتیاز به این کتاب :
       تعداد امتیاز دهندگان : 9


در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Routledge Library Editions: Wyndham Lewis به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.

توجه داشته باشید کتاب نسخه های کتابخانه روتلج: ویندهام لوئیس نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.


توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب نسخه های کتابخانه روتلج: ویندهام لوئیس

3 جلد این مجموعه، که در ابتدا بین سال‌های 1963 و 1980 منتشر شد، شامل اولین زندگی‌نامه ویندهام لوئیس (1882 - 1957) توسط زندگی‌نامه‌نویس برنده جایزه، جفری مایرز، و 2 جلد ویرایش شده توسط دوستان شخصی ویندهام لوئیس است که بینش منحصربه‌فردی را در مورد مرد، خروجی او و نگرانی او از تضاد بین هنرمند-روشنفکر و بقیه جامعه. لوئیس مسلماً یکی از چهره های روشنفکر مهم قرن بیستم است. لوئیس که به همان اندازه به عنوان یک نویسنده و نقاش با استعداد بود، نوآور و بحث برانگیز بود و به عنوان نیروی محرک پشت سر ورتیسیسم، جنبش آوانگاردی که قبل از جنگ جهانی اول در لندن شکوفا شد، شناخته شده بود. یک نقاش همه کاره، تولیدات ادبی لوئیس شگفت‌انگیز بود و او در انواع ژانرها - رمان، شعر، فلسفه، جامعه‌شناسی، سفرنامه‌نویسی، منتقد ادبی و هنری- تسلط داشت. ویندهام لوئیس که یک انقلابی برجسته در نقاشی بریتانیایی و نویسنده ای با نابغه خلاق بود، همچنین شخصاً آگوستوس جان، فورد مادوکس فورد، جیمز جویس، ازرا پاوند و تی اس الیوت را می شناخت که لوئیس را «جذاب ترین شخصیت زمان ما» می نامید.


توضیحاتی درمورد کتاب به خارجی

The 3 volumes in this set, originally published between 1963 and 1980 include the first biography of Wyndham Lewis (1882 - 1957) by the award winning biographer, Jeffrey Meyers, and 2 volumes edited by personal friends of Wyndham Lewis which give a unique insight into the man, his output and his concern with the conflict between the artist-intellectual and the rest of society. Lewis is arguably one of the major intellectual figures of the 20th Century. Equally talented as a writer and painter, Lewis was innovative and controversial and well-known as the driving force behind Vorticism, the avant-garde movement that flourished in London before the First World War. A versatile painter, Lewis’ literary output was prodigous and he mastered a variety of genres – novels, poetry, philosophy, sociology, travel writing, literary and art critic. A leading revolutionary in British painting and a writer of creative genius, Wyndham Lewis also knew personally Augustus John, Ford Madox Ford, James Joyce, Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot, who called Lewis ‘the most fascinating personality of our time’.



فهرست مطالب

Cover
Volume1
	Cover
	Half Title
	Title Page
	Copyright Page
	Original Title Page
	Original Copyright Page
	Dedication
	Table of Contents
	Acknowledgments
	1: Childhood, Rugby and the Slade, 1882-1901
	2: Bohemia and Augustus John, 1902-1908
	3: Ford and Pound, 1909-1912
	4: Omega Workshops and Rebel Art Centre, 1913-1914
	5: Vorticism and Blast, 1914
	6: The Great War, 1914-1918
	7: Women and Marriage, 1918-1925
	8: Underground Man, 1919-1925
	9: Man of the World, 1926-1929
	10: The Apes of God, 1930
	11: Politics, Germany and Hitler, 1930-1931
	12: Combat and Suppression, 1931-1933
	13: Lonely Old Volcano, 1934-1937
	14: Rejection and Recantation, 1937-1939
	15: New York, 1939-1940
	16: Toronto, 1940-1943
	17: Windsor and St. Louis, 1943-1945
	18: Notting Hill, 1945-1949
	19: Blindness, 1950-1954
	20: The Human Age, 1955-1957
	Chronology of Wyndham Lewis
	Notes
	Select Bibliography
	Index
Volume2
	Cover
	Half Title
	Title Page
	Copyright Page
	Frontispiece
	Original Title Page
	Original Copyright Page
	Table of Contents
	Illustrations
	Preface
	Notes on Editing
	Acknowledgements
	Part I: 1890-1910 Youth and the World of Tarr
		1. To his Grandmother Stuart
		2. To his Mother
		3. To his Mother
		4. To his Mother
		5. To his Mother
		6. To his Mother
		7. To his Mother
		8. To his Mother
		9. To his Mother
		10. To his Mother
		11. To his Mother
		12. To his Mother
		13. To his Mother
		14. To his Mother
		15. To his Mother
		16. To his Mother
		17. To his Mother
		18. To his Mother
		19. To his Mother
		20. To his Mother
		21. To his Mother
		22. To his Mother
		23. To his Mother
		24. To his Mother
		25. To his Mother
		26. To his Mother
		27. To his Mother
		28. To his Mother
		29. To his Mother
		30. To his Mother
		31. To his Mother
		32. To his Mother
		33. To his Mother
		34. To his Mother
		35. To his Mother
		36. To his Mother
		37. To his Mother
		38. To his Mother
		39. To his Mother
		40. To his Mother
		41. To T. Sturge Moore
	Part II: 1910-1920 Blasting and Bombardiering
		42. To J. B. Pinker
		43. To J. B. Pinker
		44. To J. B. Pinker
		44A. To Augustus John
		45. To Cuthbert Hamilton
		46. To Roger Fry
		47. The “Round Robin,”
		48. To Clive Bell
		49. To P. G. Konody
		50. To Clive Bell
		51. To Mrs. Percy Harris
		52. To the Editor of The New Age
		53. To the Editor of The New Age
		54. To the Editor of The New Age
		55. To Frederick Etchells
		56. To Alick Schepeler
		57. To the Editor of The Observer
		58. To Beatrice Hastings
		59. To Augustus John
		60. To Ezra Pound
		61. To Ezra Pound
		62. To Alick Schepeler
		63. To Kate Lechmere
		64. To Augustus John
		65. To Augustus John
		66. To Mary Borden Turner
		67. To Captain Guy Baker
		68. To T. Sturge Moore
		69. To Harriet Shaw Weaver
		70. To his Mother
		71. To his Mother
		72. To Ezra Pound
		73. To his Mother
		74. To his Mother
		75. To his Mother
		76. To his Mother
		77. To Ezra Pound
		78. To Violet Hunt
		79. To Ezra Pound
		80. To his Mother
		81. To John Quinn
		82. To T. Sturge Moore
		83. To his Mother
		84. To Alick Schepeler
		85. To Ezra Pound
		86. To Helen Saunders
		87. To Alick Schepeler
		88. To Ezra Pound
		89. To Ezra Pound
		90. To Harriet Shaw Weaver
		91. To Ezra Pound
		92. To Ezra Pound
		93. To T. Sturge Moore
		94. T. Sturge Moore to Wyndham Lewis
		95. To T. Sturge Moore
		96. To Rupert Hart-Davis
		97. To Herbert Read
		98. To Herbert Read
		99. To John Quinn
		100. To John Rodker
		101. To John Rodker
		102. To John Rodker
		103. To Paul Nash
		104. Paul Nash to Wyndhan. Lewis
		105. To Paul Nash
		106. To John Quinn
		107. To Paul Nash
		108. To E. McKnight Kauffer,
		109. To E. McKnight Kauffer
		110. To the Editor of The Athenaeum
		111. To John Quinn
	Part III: 1921-1939 “The Enemy”
		112. To Agnes Bedford
		113. To John Rodker
		114. To Harriet Shaw Weaver
		115. To Robert McAlmon
		116. To Robert McAlmon
		117. To Agnes Bedford
		118. To James Joyce
		119. To Herbert Read
		120. To Robert McAlmon
		121. To Osbert Sitwell
		122. To T. S. Eliot
		123. To T. S. Eliot
		124. To T. S. Eliot
		125. To T. S. Eliot
		126. To T. S. Eliot
		127. To R. Cobden-Sanderson
		128. To T. S. Eliot
		129. To T. S. Eliot
		130. To T. S. Eliot
		131. To T. S. Eliot
		132. To T. S. Eliot
		133. To Mrs. Edward Wadsworth
		134. To Richard Wyndham
		135. To Richard Wyndham
		136. To Mrs. O. R. Drey
		137. To Richard Wyndham
		138. To T. S. Eliot
		139. To T. S. Eliot
		140. T. S. Eliot to Wyndham Lewis
		141. To T. S. Eliot
		142. To Charles Whibley
		143. To Robert McAlmon
		144. To Robert McAlmon
		145. To Robert McAlmon
		146. To Agnes Bedford
		147. To Ezra Pound
		148. To Robert McAlmon
		149. To Robert McAlmon
		150. To O. R. Drey
		151. To O. R. Drey
		152. To O. R. Drey
		153. To T. S. Eliot
		154. To Miss I. P. Fassett
		155. To Robert McAlmon
		156. To Robert McAlmon
		157. To C. H. Prentice
		158. To the Editor of the Evening Standard
		159. To C. H. Prentice
		160. To T. S. Eliot
		161. To John Middleton Murry
		162. To Herbert Read
		163. To Herbert Read
		164. To the Rev. M. C. D’Arcy, S.J.,
		165. To C. H. Prentice
		166. To C. H. Prentice
		167. To C. H. Prentice
		168. To C. H. Prentice
		169. To David Garnett
		170. To H. G, Wells
		171. To W. B. Yeats
		172. To W. B. Yeats
		173. To A. J. A. Symons
		174. To C. H. Prentice
		175. To a Tax Inspector
		176. To A. J. A. Symons
		177. To C. H. Prentice
		178. To A. J. A. Symons
		179. To Richard Aldington
		180. To Richard Aldington
		181. Circular Letter from The Arthur Press
		182. To A. J. A. Symons
		183. To A. J. A. Symons
		184. To Augustus John
		185. Augustus John to Wyndham Lewis
		186. To C. H. Prentice
		187. Circular Letter from The Arthur Press
		188. To Shane Leslie
		189. To C. H. Prentice
		190. To the Editor of Time and Tide
		191. To Naomi Mitchison
		192. To C. H. Prentice
		193. To Naomi Mitchison
		194. To A. J. A. Symons
		195. To Roy Campbell
		196. To the Editor of Time and Tide
		197. To Mrs. Winifred Henderson
		198. To Desmond Harmsworth
		199. To Naomi Mitchison
		200. To A. J. A. Symons
		201. To Sydney Schiff
		202. To Naomi Mitchison
		203. To the Editor of New Britain
		204. To Hugh Gordon Porteus
		205. To Naomi Mitchison
		206. To Sir Nicholas Waterhouse
		207. To Richard Aldington
		208. To A. J. A. Symons
		209. To Sir Nicholas Waterhouse
		210. To Roy Campbell
		211. To Desmond Flower
		212. To Denys Kilham Roberts
		213. To Hugh Gordon Porteus
		214. To the Editor of The Spectator
		215. To the Editor of The Times Literary Supplement
		216. To Herbert Read
		217. To John Grey Murray
		218. To the Editor of The New Statesman and Nation
		219. To the Editor of The Times Literary Supplement
		220. To Naomi Mitchison
		221. To Richard Aldington
		222. To Richard Aldington
		223. To the Editor of The Observer
		224. To the Rev. M. C. D Arcy, S.J.,
		225. To Sir Nicholas Waterhouse
		226. To Mrs. Roy Campbell
		227. To Oliver Brown
		228. To Roy Campbell
		229. To G. Wren Howard
		230. To Desmond Flower
		231. To Oliver Brown
		232. To Lovat Dickson
		233. To William Gaunt
		234. To the Editor of Twentieth Century Verse
		235. To Douglas Jerrold
		236. To P. Van der Kruik
		237. T. S. Eliot to Wyndham Lewis
		238. To the Editor of the Daily Telegraph
		239. To the Editor of The Times
		240. To the Editor of The Times
		241. To the Editor of The Times
		242. To Naomi Mitchison
		243. To Sir William Rothenstein
		244. To R. A. Scott-James
		245. To Lord Carlow
		246. To Lord Carlow
		247. To P. Van der Kruik
	Part IV: 1939-1945 Self Condemned
		248. To T. J. Honeyman
		249. To T. J. Honeyman
		250. To Charles D. Abbott
		251. To Terence W. L. Mac-Dermot
		252. To Mrs. John Rothenstein
		253. To Geoffrey Stone
		254. To the Editor of The New Republic
		255. To Charles D. Abbott
		256. To Leonard Amster
		257. To Geoffrey Stone
		258. To James Johnson Sweeney
		259. To Terence W. L. Mac-Dermot
		260. To Geoffrey Stone
		261. To John Slocum
		262. To Geoffrey Stone
		263. To Geoffrey Stone
		264. To Geoffrey Stone
		265. To Henry T. Volkening
		266. To Geoffrey Stone
		267. To Augustus John
		268. To Robert Hale
		269. To Lorne Pierce
		270. To Lorne Pierce
		271. To Lorne Pierce
		272. To Lorne Pierce
		273. To T. Sturge Moore
		274. To Lorne Pierce
		275. To Robert Hale
		276. To Geoffrey Stone
		277. To Geoffrey Stone
		278. To Naomi Mitchison
		279. To Frank Morley
		280. To Archibald MacLeish
		281. To John Crowe Ransom
		282. To Lorne Pierce
		283. To Robert Hale
		284. To Mrs. Thomas W. Lamont
		285. To Leonard W. Brockington
		286. To Edmund Wilson
		287. To J. M. Dent & Son, Ltd.
		288. To Geoffrey Stone
		289. To R. D. Jameson
		290. To Sir Nicholas Waterhouse
		291. To Lady Waterhouse
		292. To R. D. Jameson
		293. To Mrs. Thomas W. Lamont
		294. To Leonard W. Brockington
		295. To Theodore Spencer
		296. To Theodore Spencer
		297. To Eric Kennington
		298. To Sir Nicholas Waterhouse
		299. To Naomi Mitchison
		300. To Louis MacNeice
		301. To H. G. Wells
		302. To David Kahma
		303. To Sir Nicholas Waterhouse
		304. To James Johnson Sweeney
		305. To John Burgess
		306. To Augustus John
		307. To John Rothenstein
		308. To James Johnson Sweeney
		309. To Henry Moore
		310. To Naomi Mitchison
		311. To Lord Carlow
		312. To Theodore Spencer
		313. To the Rev. J. Stanley Murphy
		314. To Eric Kennington
		315. To the Rev. J. Stanley Murphy
		316. To Naomi Mitchison
		317. To Malcolm MacDonald
		318. To John Burgess
		319. To Malcolm MacDonald
		320. To Malcolm MacDonald
		321. To Felix Giovanelli
		322. To Naomi Mitchison
		323. To John Rothenstein
		324. To John Burgess
		325. To Charles Nagel
		326. To Marshall McLuhan
		327. To Edgar Preston Richardson
		328. To Marshall McLuhan
		329. To John Burgess
		330. To Felix Giovanelli
		331. To Marshall McLuhan
		332. To Marshall McLuhan
		333. To Mrs. Roy Campbell
		334. To Felix Giovanelli
		335. To Felix Giovanelli
		336. To T. S. Eliot
		337. To Pauline Bondy
		338. To Gerty T. Cori
		339. To DwightMacdonald
		340. To James Johnson Sweeney
		341. To T. S. Eliot
	Part V: 1945-1956 The Writer and the Absolute
		342. To Allen Tate
		343. To Allen Tate
		344. To Augustus John
		345. To Allen Tate
		346. To Lady Waterhouse
		347. To Sir Nicholas Waterhouse
		348. To Allan Gwynne-Jones
		349. To Naomi Mitchison
		350. To Augustus John
		351. To Allen Tate
		352. To T. S. Eliot
		353. To Ezra Pound
		354. To Allen Tate
		355. To Ezra Pound
		356. To Augustus John
		357. To Augustus John
		358. To Augustus John
		359. To Geoffrey Grigson
		360. To Dwight Macdonald
		361. To Ezra Pound
		362. To Michael Ayrton
		363. To James Thrall Soby
		364. To Naomi Mitchison
		365. To Felix Giovanelli
		366. To Mrs. K. H. Webb
		367. To Allen Tate
		368. To David Kahma
		369. To James Thrall Soby
		370. To Mrs. Ezra Pound
		371. To the Editor of The Times Literary Supplement
		372. To Mrs. Ezra Pound
		373. To David Kahma
		374. To David Kahma
		375. To Mrs. Ezra Pound
		376. To William Gaunt
		377. To James Thrall Soby
		378. To David Kahma
		379. To Felix Giovanelli
		380. To Ezra Pound
		381. To David Kahma
		382. To Geoffrey Stone
		383. To Herbert Read
		384. To David Kahma
		385. To Alan Pryce-Jones
		386. To Felix Giovanelli
		387. To David Kahma
		388. To Ezra Pound
		389. To Mrs. Ezra Pound
		390. To David Kahma
		391. To Ezra Pound
		392. To David Kahma
		393. To David Kahma
		394. To Geoffrey Stone
		395. To the Editor of The Listener
		396. To David Kahma
		397. To the Editor of The Listener
		398. To Geoffrey Stone
		399. T o the Editor of The Listener
		400. To Ezra Pound
		401. To David Kahma
		402. To Augustus John
		403. To Kenneth Allott
		404. To Geoffrey Stone
		405. To Geoffrey Stone
		406. To David Low
		407. To Keidrych Rhys
		408. To David Kahma
		409. To D. D. Paige
		410. To Felix Giovanelli
		411. To Felix Giovanelli
		412. To the Rev. Willis Feast
		413. To D. D. Paige
		414. To Edgar Preston Richardson
		415. To David Kahma
		416. To D. D. Paige
		417. To T. S. Eliot
		418. To D. D. Paige
		419. To Geoffrey Stone
		420. To Felix Giovanelli
		421. To David Kahma
		422. To Archibald MacLeish
		423. To D. D. Paige
		424. To Julian Symons
		425. To Felix Giovanelli
		426. To Augustus John
		427. To Gene Nash
		428. To David Kahma
		429. To James Thrall Soby
		430. To J. E. Palmer
		431. To Theodore Weiss
		432. To the Rev. Willis Feast
		433. To the Editor of Partisan Review
		434. To Hugh Kenner
		435. To T. W. Earp
		436. To David Kahma
		437. To T. S. Eliot
		438. To David Kahma
		439. To John Rothenstein
		440. To Felix Giovanelli
		441. To David Kahma
		442. To Alfred Barr, Jr.,
		443. To Felix Giovanelli
		444. To David Kahma
		445. To a London Photographer
		446. To Charles Handley-Read
		447. To Charles Handley-Read
		448. To David Kahma
		449. To W. K. Rose
		450. To the Rev. Henry Swakey
		451. To David Kahma
		452. To David Kahma
		453. To Augustus John
		454. To David Kahma
		455. To J. E. Palmer
		456. To Sir Nicholas Waterhouse
		457. To Ezra Pound
		458. To T. S. Eliot
		459. T. S. Eliot to Wyndham Lewis
		460. To Meyrick Booth
		461. To David Kahma
		462. To Roy Campbell
		463. To Helen Saunders
		464. To T. S. Eliot
		465. To Sir Nicholas Waterhouse
		466. To Meyrick Booth
		467. To Herbert Read
		468. To J. Alan White
		469. To the Editor of The Listener
		470. To Meyrick Booth
		471. To the Editor of The Listener
		472. To James Laughlin
		473. To the Editor of The Listener
		474. To the Editor of The Listener
		475. To David Kahma
		476. To I. A. Richards
		477. To Naomi Mitchison
		478. To J. R. Ackerley
		479. To Cynthia Thompson
		480. To Miss Vanner
		481. To Julian Symons
		482. To Stephen Spender
		483. To D. G. Bridson
		484. To Augustus John
		485. To David Kahma
		486. To Roy Campbell
		487. To Sir Louis Fergusson
		488. To David Kahma
		489. To Mrs. Ezra Pound
		490. To D. G. Bridson
		491. To I. A. Richards
		492. To I. A. Richards
		493. To Sir Nicholas Waterhouse
		494. To Ezra Pound
		495. To David Kahma
		496. To Henry Regnery
		497. To Stuart Gilbert
		498. To T. S. Eliot
		499. To Hugh Kenner
		500. To T. S. Eliot
		501. To Marshall McLuhan
		502. To T. S. Eliot
		503. To Hugh Kenner
		504. To T. S. Eliot
		505. To Mrs. Amor Liber
		506. To Ezra Pound
		507. To J. Alan White
		508. To J. Alan White
		509. To Sir Nicholas Waterhouse
		510. To Ruthven Todd
		511. To Frederick Morgan
		512. To Hugh Kenner
		513. To Russell Kirk
		514. To T. S. Eliot
		515. To Ezra Pound
		516. To Hugh Kenner
		517. To Ezra Pound
		518. To Michael Ayrton
		519. To a London Editor
	Index
Volume3
	Cover
	Half Title
	Title Page
	Copyright Page
	Original Title Page
	Original Copyright Page
	Table of Contents
	Acknowledgements
	Note
	Introduction
	1: Sociological and Philosophical Writings
	2: Writings on Literature and the Arts
	3: Autobiographical Writings
	4: Travel
	5: America
	Epilogue: On His Blindness




نظرات کاربران