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81. Mon gourou et son disciple
 
82. On the Frontier: A Melodrama in
$30.79
83. Lowen Und Schatten
$12.11
84. The Mortmere Stories (Edward Upward
 
85. The Goodbye to Berlin; with drawings
86. Lost Years
 
87. La Violeta del Prater (Spanish
 
$2.98
88. People One Ought to Know
 
89. Diaries; volume one: 1939-1969,
$63.29
90. Leb wohl, Berlin. Ein Roman in
91. Un homme au singulier
 
92. The Class on the Campus. From
93. Jakob der Heiler. Eine Originaldrehbuchvorlage.
$24.28
94. Toward The Goal Supreme
 
95. The Condor and the Crows
 
96. ON THE FRONTIER: A MELODRAMA IN
97. Les joyaux de l'architecture belge
 
98. The Ascent of F6
 
$9.50
99. The last of Mr. Norris
$11.67
100. The Case of California

81. Mon gourou et son disciple
by Christopher Isherwood
Mass Market Paperback: 334 Pages (2002-11-07)

Isbn: 2264032332
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82. On the Frontier: A Melodrama in Three Acts
by W. H. Auden, Christopher Isherwood
 Hardcover: 120 Pages (1938-06)
list price: US$12.50
Isbn: 0404146384
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83. Lowen Und Schatten
by Christopher Isherwood
Hardcover: 320 Pages (2010-01-01)
-- used & new: US$30.79
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 3937834362
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84. The Mortmere Stories (Edward Upward Series)
by Edward Upward, Christopher Isherwood
Paperback: 206 Pages (1995-10-17)
list price: US$21.95 -- used & new: US$12.11
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1870612698
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Although legendary in literary and academic circles, these sometimes gothic, sometimes grotesque, and often hilarious stories are published here for the first time. Christopher Isherwood and his old school friend, Edward Upward, were Cambridge undergraduates in the early 1920s when they engaged in a literary attack on the dons and the poshocracy"" the fashionable and wealthy students. The stories are important milestones, offering a glimpse of the initial literary styles of two authors who later became famous - the meticulous, experimental, intellectually rigorous Upward, and the prodigiously talented Isherwood creating an extraordinary world in an engaging manner. ""A bit of wickedly funny ephemera."" - A Different Light Newsletter. ... Read more


85. The Goodbye to Berlin; with drawings by George Grosz selected by Frank Whitford.
by Christopher Isherwood
 Paperback: Pages (1975)

Asin: B0041UTPT2
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86. Lost Years
by Christopher Isherwood
Paperback: 432 Pages (2001-07-05)

Isbn: 0099283247
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87. La Violeta del Prater (Spanish Edition) (Fin de Siglo)
by Christopher Isherwood
 Paperback: Pages (1989)

Isbn: 9682927323
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88. People One Ought to Know
by Christopher Isherwood, Sylvain Mangeot
 Hardcover: 64 Pages (1982-12)
list price: US$2.98 -- used & new: US$2.98
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0385175361
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Editorial Review

Product Description
A collection of eighteen illustrated poems about a variety of animals with some particularly human characteristics. ... Read more


89. Diaries; volume one: 1939-1969, edited and introduced by Katherine Bucknell.
by Christopher Isherwood
 Paperback: Pages (1997)

Asin: B003NY98MG
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90. Leb wohl, Berlin. Ein Roman in Episoden.
by Christopher Isherwood
Paperback: Pages (1998-09-01)
-- used & new: US$63.29
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 3548245358
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91. Un homme au singulier
by Christopher Isherwood, Léo Dilé
Mass Market Paperback: 164 Pages (1984-02-01)

Isbn: 2020067196
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92. The Class on the Campus. From a New Novel.
by Christopher Isherwood
 Paperback: Pages (1964)

Asin: B0040QRZSK
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93. Jakob der Heiler. Eine Originaldrehbuchvorlage.
by Aldous Huxley, Christopher Isherwood
Paperback: 127 Pages (2001-01-01)

Isbn: 3548600204
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94. Toward The Goal Supreme
by Swami Virajananda
Hardcover: 156 Pages (2007-07-25)
list price: US$36.95 -- used & new: US$24.28
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0548084548
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone! ... Read more


95. The Condor and the Crows
by Christopher Isherwood
 Hardcover: Pages (1949)

Asin: B0046P7ZP8
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96. ON THE FRONTIER: A MELODRAMA IN 3 ACTS
by W. H. and Isherwood, Christopher Auden
 Unknown Binding: Pages (1939)

Asin: B0041DI4YQ
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97. Les joyaux de l'architecture belge
by Christopher Isherwood
Mass Market Paperback: 178 Pages (2004-11-17)

Isbn: 2253099252
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98. The Ascent of F6
by W.H. Auden, Christopher Isherwood
 Paperback: 191 Pages (1958-12)

Isbn: 0571069436
Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (1)

2-0 out of 5 stars The play doesn't quite make it, either
Can the abilities of two writers combine into a truly strong work?Some have launched projects with the hope of achieving this, but the results have usually left us with more questions than answers.Whenever artists decide to work together, there are problems caused by their egotistical trade.Two minds with a clear sense of what they're about will almost certainly bang together.

Wystan Hugh Auden and Christopher Isherwood are men who overcame some differences to write plays for London's Group Theatre in the 1930s.The plays have been commercially and critically viable since their first productions and overshadow many twentieth century dramas that have come and gone.By the authors' talents alone, 'The Dog Beneath the Skin,' 'The Ascent of F6,' and 'On the Frontier' will probably remain on stage boards for years to come.

Billed as a 'tragedy in two acts,' 'The Ascent of F6' was first published in September 1936 and enjoyed its premiere in February 1937.Its original production featured Ashley Dukes as director, Robert Medley as stage designer, and Benjamin Britten as composer of incidental music.Successful with audiences from the beginning, 'F6' has undergone several book printings and revivals by theater groups, including at the Old Vic.

'F6,' the second of three plays co-written by Auden and Isherwood, is one of many works that have succeeded despite major flaws.Audiences, especially those living in the social hardships of 1930s Britain, have related to its subject matter and appreciate the poetic skills that both men owned.The idea that Auden and Isherwood's talents would be visible in 'F6' is a no-brainer. 'F6,' however, lacks a cohesive plot and a clear sense of what type of play it wants to be.Auden and Isherwood tried their darnedest to make the whole better than the sum of its parts, but they seemed unable to escape the issues that have spoiled many a partnership.

The so-called F6 is a mountain dividing two regions in Sudoland, a fictional land known for its coffee trade.Great Britain, which has kept a stronghold over the native population for decades, now finds itself threatened by Ostnia, a rival nation that occupies some of the territory.Wanting to make a political statement, both countries aim to scale F6, a rock face thought insurmountable.Local legend has the mountain occupied by a demon that makes it impossible for any person to climb.The Ostnians are using this tale to their advantage, telling natives that the first White man to climb F6 will rule all of Sudoland for a thousand years.

British social powers who are desperate to maintain the status quo - royalty, the government, the military, and the upper classes - call upon Michael Forsyth Ransom and his team to reach the summit.Called 'M. F.' by his friends, Ransom is a young mountain climber who parallels real-life men like Sir Edmund Hillary and Auden's own brother John (the dedicatee of the play), who explored and mapped the Himalayas.

It is clear from the opening scene that 'F6' was written in a Marxist-Freudian train of thought.Instead of portraying Ransom's climb as an act of valor, Auden and Isherwood put this bravery in relief to social, political, and mental issues that are far more overwhelming.Ransom is a well-travelled and well-educated man who does not readily buy into his country's wishes.He is drawn to eastern philosophies such as Buddhism and repelled by such things as national conquest and the use of heroism for political gain.

Ransom is torn between the desire for a quiet life of reflection (as shown by his talk with a monastery abbot) and the feeling of obligation to his homeland, colleagues, and family.Cartoonish figures such as Lady Isabel Welwyn and Lord Stagmantle apply pressure to Michael in upholding the British race.He is also competing for his mother's love against Sir James Ransom, a brother and colonial officer who has suggested Michael for the F6 campaign.This 'mother conflict' is of the Freudian type and dominates Ransom's psychological outlook.

'F6' is divided into two acts with a total of eight scenes.Act I is a tapestry of social and economic forces in the British Empire's waning days, while Act II is centered upon the hopes and anxieties of Michael Ransom and his four colleagues - Shawcross, Gunn, Lamp, and Dr. Williams.Throughout the play, this F6 tour is contrasted with the everyday lives of 'Mr. and Mrs. A.,' an ordinary British couple who live from one paycheck to the next.Their doldrums and half-hearted interest in the F6 climb are seen in a box adjacent to the stage.Taking place in an opposite box are radio broadcasts with characters such as Lady Welwyn, Lord Stagmantle, and an unnamed announcer who serve up their tired clichés.

Auden's verses and Isherwood's prose are, for the most part, in top form.The authors have created genuinely moving episodes, including the day-to-day anxieties of Mr. and Mrs. A., the deaths of Ransom's colleagues on the rock face, and Ransom's awareness that he will never make the summit.This inability of Ransom to reach a higher plane is oddly in keeping with the men and women who struggle to make ends meet several thousand feet below.

Auden and Isherwood, both in the neighborhood of age 30 when 'F6' was written, made a terrible mistake by including satirical episodes within the tragedy.In these scenes, Auden and Isherwood are reaching out to a general audience, but it totally kills off the play's effectiveness.At the end of Act I, for example, Ransom's mother sings a ditty on the power of mothers over their children.And there is the play's final scene, an allegory that mixes choruses, the play's characters as men in a chess game, the monastery abbot donning a judge's wig, and James Ransom garbed as a dragon.

This finale is along the lines of Gilbert & Sullivan's 'Trial by Jury,' which found its way into other dramas.There are so many important issues being dealt with in 'F6' that any comical approach to its themes just doesn't belong.In a 1965 lecture, Isherwood flatly admitted that 'the end of the play was always a terrible mess.'Attempts were made to improve the scene in revivals, but this problem of a farcical ending in an otherwise serious play has never been cleared up.The scene is so out of place and inept that it single-handedly discredits the entire work.

The play's better scenes are not free of problems, either.One example is that moment on F6 when a human skull is found, the authors' silly reference to 'Hamlet.'Ransom also surrenders to his colleagues' hopes and begins climbing F6 when he seems on the verge of walking away from it.We are never supplied with a reason for this mind change, other than the suggestion of a Freudian mother-complex: Ransom must climb F6 to please his mother, above all else.There are times when Ransom's motivations are vague and the authors are caught up in their own rhetoric.

Would this lousy conclusion and many of the rough edges have disappeared if one person were creating 'F6' instead of two?Collaboration is an issue that authors have long struggled with.In his 1965 lecture, Isherwood notes that he'd 'done a great deal of collaborating during [his] life and with a very wide variety of people' and found that 'under certain circumstances, particularly for the theater, it's stimulating.'There is perhaps no better experience than working on drama with W. H. Auden.But is collaboration a path to artistic achievement or only the byproduct of great conversation?

Stephen Spender, a friend to both men, gave his more objective view on Auden and Isherwood's plays in 1938.'One may suspect,' he wrote, 'that [a] collaboration itself is responsible for some [ ] faults: each writer hopes that the other is going to try harder than himself...neither writer feels as responsible for the criticism which the play may arouse as he would if the work were entirely his own.More important, it must be very difficult in a collaboration to construct the unique, hemmed-in, and claustrophobic atmosphere, which is essential to a play.'Perhaps, then, an argument can be made for having just one person behind the steering wheel.

Knowing its stronger points, 'F6' is not a complete loss.The play is an interesting result of two writers who shared common ideals, however briefly they may've held onto them. Both men, particularly Auden, had an on-again, off-again relationship with Marxism before its pivotal failure in the Spanish Civil War.Auden later embraced Anglican Catholicism while Isherwood held ongoing interest in eastern mystics. Politics aside, the conflicts of Ransom can make for exceptional drama and there is much to be said in 'F6' for human friendship and man's strength in the face of adversity.It makes several of these points without heavy-handedness, rare for plays of this type and era.

'F6' has been printed repeatedly by Faber & Faber (who released the original volume in England) and by Random House, Auden's U. S. publisher.It can be found on its own or in combination volumes with Auden and Isherwood's other plays, all of varying years and varying formats.Used copies can be found on the Web, especially through Amazon and antiquarian book dealers.
... Read more


99. The last of Mr. Norris
by Christopher Isherwood
 Paperback: Pages (1964-01-01)
-- used & new: US$9.50
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B000NPW7GC
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100. The Case of California
by Laurence Rickels, Laurence A. Rickels, Christopher Isherwood
Paperback: 384 Pages (2001-06)
list price: US$26.00 -- used & new: US$11.67
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0816638780
Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Literary Theory/Cultural Studies

A cult classic that explores the concept of "California"-now back in print!

Focusing on the changing image of the West Coast through such varied social and cultural artifacts as bodybuilding, group therapy, suicide cults, milk-carton images of missing children, teenage slang, and surf music, Laurence Rickels offers a dizzying psychohistory of the twentieth century as crystallized in the symbolic configuration called California and considered in relation to German modernism, national socialism, and Freudian psychoanalysis.

"Rickels has written an important book reading psychoanalyis at the end of our century. His intent is to complete Adorno's refiguring of Mickey Mouse into his own Rickelian refiguration of Freud's project."Sander L. Gilman

"Laurence Rickels is one of the few theorists today who is able to think technology through psychoanalysis and vice versa . . . .With California as the site of this encounter, Rickels takes Freud to the beach and California to the couch, picking up, in many ways, where the FrankfurtSchool left off." Artforum

"Provocative (and often hilarious), The Case of California explores the 'bi-coastal logic of modernity,' with California as one coast and Germany as the other. . . . Startling and brilliant." San Francisco Bay Guardian

Laurence A. Rickels is professor of German literature at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He is the author of The Vampire Lectures (1999) and the editor of Acting Out in Groups (1999), both published by the University of Minnesota Press. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (2)

1-0 out of 5 stars A Mess
Although there are some random clevernesses in this, I doubt they would be worth it for most folks. The author's complete surrender to pun instead of state makes this work a slough of despond.

5-0 out of 5 stars You need to read this book...whoever you are!
Before I give you the back cover of this book, I have to tell you that this book is not necessarily an "easy read" despite its alliterated and enticing chapter titles. Having been a student of LaurenceRickels', I feel obligated to tell you that if you haven't read this bookor any of his others (Aberrations of Mourning:Writing on German Crypts, Derunbetrauerbare Tod) you are absolutely missing out on some of the mostinteresting contemporary literary theory you can find!

"In 'culturalclips' that fast-forward and rewind through a variety of images,disciplines,and time zones, Laurence Rickels explores 'California' as bothan empirical place and a symbolic configuration. Focusing on the changingimage of the West Coast to study politics, sexuality, and the effects ofmass media in modern culture, The Case of California is Rickels' dizzyingpsychohistory of postmodernity.

In California, Rickels locates 'theintersection between technology and the unconscious' and thus reconstructsthe political front of pshoanalysis which arose to combat NationalSocialism. California and Germany, he contends, are two coasts of an erathat 'lets roll' in the Enlightenment and continues to this day. Kafka isthe 'ultimate Kalifornian'. The fall of the Berlin wall and the SanFrancisco Earthquake appear 'symptomatically in sync'. And the invention ofthe California teenager - the archetypical adolescent - begins with 'acertain central European refusal of death'.

As he addresses an array ofpopcultural phenomena, Rickels situates the Frankfurt School of AdornoBenjamin, Horkheimer, and Marcuse within the Freudian system - and withinthe critical boundaries of deconstruction. Along the way he explores musicand sound, mourning and the charge of sexual abuse, group and adolescentpsychology, female sexuality, the convergence of religious and hystericalconversion, and the shifting status of writing and literature brought aboutthrough the rise of 'reproductive' media such as photography, film, andtelevision."

"The Case of California is one of the mostpowerful attempts we have so far to establish connections betweencontemporary culture and certain German texts that are inseparable frommodernity." - Samuel Weber, University of California, Los Angeles ... Read more


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