Modern Tragedy
Raymond Williams. Part I is a critical examination of the es–
sential ideas of tragedy as they have evolved in different periods
of history and different societies. Part II is a series of essays
on modern tragic literature from Ibsen to Sartre. The author
shows how the three major new systems of thinkillg-Marxism,
Freudianism, and Existentialism-are all, in their most com–
mon forms, tragic.
$5.50
The Play Called Corpus Christi
v.
A. Kolve. The Corpus Christi drama held the stage for over
two hundred years, testifying to a remarkable vitality in the
form and its detail. The author's goal has been to understand
the plays in their own time; what a medieval dramatist might
have put in his text, and what a medieval audience might have
understood in seeing the play staged.
$8.50
Stankevich and His
Moscow Circle, 1830-1840
Edward
J.
Brown. Stankevich was the leader of a group at
Moscow University that included Turgenev, Bakunin, Herzen,
Belinski, and Granovsky. This biographical study is an unusual–
ly compelling evocation of the intellectual and emotional
atmosphere in the time when Russian literature was taking its
first steps toward greatness.
$5.00
Now
AVAILABLE
IN
PAPERBACK:
Kipling's Mind and Art
SELECTED CRITICAL ESSAYS. Edited by Andrew Rutherford. "The
most valuable book of its kind in recent years, because it of–
fers a widely oriented approach to an assessment of a great
writer."-The New York Times Book Review
$2.65
Burns
A STUDY OF THE POEMS AND SONGS. Thomas Crawford. "Burns's
kind of writing deserves Thomas Crawford's study. It is clear,
sensible, knowledgeable, devoid alike of sentimentality and of
patriotic ecstasies."-The Hudson Review
$2.95
A
Handbook of Classical Drama
Philip Whaley Harsh. "A scholarly, critical, and an almost
definitive compendium of the entire field of classical drama for
which t eachers and students of drama have long felt the need."–
Western Speech
$3.45
STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS