86 products were found matching your search for Snyder Gary Lektionen der in 1 shops:
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Understanding Gary Snyder (Understanding Contemporary American Literature) [first edition]
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 20.00 $Fine copy in hardcover with fine jacket.
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Gary Snyder: Collected Poems (Loa #357) (Library of America, 357) [first edition]
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 25.00 $New. Shrink-wrapped. 1st edition. Hardbound in dust jacket.
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Han Shan, Chan Buddhism and Gary Snyder's Ecopoetic Way
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 36.05 $This book is a comparative study of the ninth-century Chinese poet Han Shan (Cold Mountain) and Gary Snyder, an American poet and environmental activist. Author Joan Tan explains how Chan Buddhism has the potential to be recognized as an important voice in contemporary ecopoetry. Chan/Zen theory is employed as aesthetic criteria to explicate the dual discourses - spiritual and aesthetic - which exist in Han Shan's and Snyder's work. Snyder's goal of establishing one ecosystem for all communities encouraged him to adopt Han Shan as an ideal model and Chan Buddhism as a global subculture representing environmental values. The book investigates how Snyder interweaves Chinese cultural sources in an eclectic way to impose a sense of place, a sense of mission, and a sense of energy in his ecopoetry. His unique ideogrammatic method - riprapping (developed as a result of his literary indebtedness to the Oriental tradition) - makes for a forceful statement on contemporary ecology. Through Snyder's successful translation, Han Shan has been revived as an immortal Beat Poet (Jack Kerouac features prominently in the chapters), while Cold Mountain has emerged as synonymous with enlightenment. Snyder himself has become an exemplary representative of an American Han Shan. The poetic line extending from Han Shan through to Chan/Zen to contemporary ecology is considered here as a continuum - a continuum profoundly enhanced by Snyder's remarkable achievement of eco-wholeness - the original goal of Han Shan in his ecopoetry. The book is complemented with full Chinese character text and glossary.
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Han Shan, Chan Buddhism and Gary Snyder's Ecopoetic Way
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 40.92 $This book is a comparative study of the ninth-century Chinese poet Han Shan (Cold Mountain) and Gary Snyder, an American poet and environmental activist. Author Joan Tan explains how Chan Buddhism has the potential to be recognized as an important voice in contemporary ecopoetry. Chan/Zen theory is employed as aesthetic criteria to explicate the dual discourses - spiritual and aesthetic - which exist in Han Shan's and Snyder's work. Snyder's goal of establishing one ecosystem for all communities encouraged him to adopt Han Shan as an ideal model and Chan Buddhism as a global subculture representing environmental values. The book investigates how Snyder interweaves Chinese cultural sources in an eclectic way to impose a sense of place, a sense of mission, and a sense of energy in his ecopoetry. His unique ideogrammatic method - riprapping (developed as a result of his literary indebtedness to the Oriental tradition) - makes for a forceful statement on contemporary ecology. Through Snyder's successful translation, Han Shan has been revived as an immortal Beat Poet (Jack Kerouac features prominently in the chapters), while Cold Mountain has emerged as synonymous with enlightenment. Snyder himself has become an exemplary representative of an American Han Shan. The poetic line extending from Han Shan through to Chan/Zen to contemporary ecology is considered here as a continuum - a continuum profoundly enhanced by Snyder's remarkable achievement of eco-wholeness - the original goal of Han Shan in his ecopoetry. The book is complemented with full Chinese character text and glossary.
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Gary Snyder Dimensions of a Life
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 78.22 $Fellow writers reminisce about Gary Snyder, a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and essayist, mountaineer, Zen Buddhist, and environmentalist, and his influence on their lives
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Conversations with Gary Snyder (Literary Conversations Series)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 113.81 $Gary Snyder (b. 1930) is one of the most distinguished American poets, remarkable both for his long and productive career and for his equal contributions to literature and environmental thought. His childhood in the Pacific Northwest profoundly shaped his sensibility due to his contact with Native American culture and his early awareness of the destruction of the environment by corporations. Although he emerged from the San Francisco Renaissance with writers such as Kenneth Rexroth, Robert Duncan, and William Everson, he became associated with the Beats due to his friendships with Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac, who included a portrait of Snyder as Japhy Ryder in his novel The Dharma Bums. After graduating from Reed College, Snyder became deeply involved with Zen Buddhism, and he spent twelve years in Japan immersed in study.Conversations with Gary Snyder collects interviews from 1961 to 2015 and charts his developing environmental philosophy and his wide-ranging interests in ecology, Buddhism, Native American studies, history, and mythology. The book also demonstrates the ways Snyder has returned throughout his career to key ideas such as the extended family, shamanism, poetics, visionary experience, and caring for the environment as well as his relationship to the Beat movement. Because the book contains interviews spanning more than fifty years, the reader witnesses how Snyder has evolved and grown both as a poet and philosopher of humanity's proper relationship to the cosmos while remaining committed to the issues that preoccupied him as a young man.
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The Gary Snyder Reader: Prose, Poetry, and Translations
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 24.71 $Gary Snyder has been a major cultural force in America for five decades-prize-winning poet, environmental activist, Zen Buddhist, and reluctant counterculture guru. Having expanded far beyond the Beat poems that first brought his work into the public eye, Snyder has produced a wide-ranging body of work that encompasses his fluency in Eastern literature and culture, his commitment to the environment, and his concepts of humanity's place in the cosmos. The Gary Snyder Reader showcases the panoramic range of his literary vision in a single-volume survey that will appeal to students and general readers alike.
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Gary Snyder and the Pacific Rim: Creating Countercultural Community (Contemp North American Poetry)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 35.82 $In Gary Snyder and the Pacific Rim, Timothy Gray draws upon previously unpublished journals and letters as well as his own close readings of Gary Snyder's well-crafted poetry and prose to track the early career of a maverick intellectual whose writings powered the San Francisco Renaissance of the 1950s and 1960s. Exploring various aspects of cultural geography, Gray asserts that this west coast literary community seized upon the idea of a Pacific Rim regional structure in part to recognize their Orientalist desires and in part to consolidate their opposition to America's cold war ideology, which tended to divide East from West. The geographical consciousness of Snyder's writing was particularly influential, Gray argues, because it gave San Francisco's Beat and hippie cultures a set of physical coordinates by which they could chart their utopian visions of peace and love.Gray's introduction tracks the increased use of “Pacific Rim discourse” by politicians and business leaders following World War II. Ensuing chapters analyze Snyder's countercultural invocation of this regional idea, concentrating on the poet's migratory or “creaturely” sensibility, his gift for literary translation, his physical embodiment of trans-Pacific ideals, his role as tribal spokesperson for Haight-Ashbury hippies, and his burgeoning interest in environmental issues. Throughout, Gray's citations of such writers as Allen Ginsberg, Philip Whalen, and Joanne Kyger shed light on Snyder's communal role, providing an amazingly intimate portrait of the west coast counterculture. An interdisciplinary project that utilizes models of ecology, sociology, and comparative religion to supplement traditional methods of literary biography, Gary Snyder and the Pacific Rim offers a unique perspective on Snyder's life and work. This book will fascinate literary and Asian studies scholars as well as the general reader interested in the Beat movement and multicultural influences on poetry.
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Gary Snyder: Collected Poems (LOA #357) (Library of America, 357)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 29.74 $Book is in Used-VeryGood condition. Pages and cover are clean and intact. Used items may not include supplementary materials such as CDs or access codes. May show signs of minor shelf wear and contain very limited notes and highlighting. 1.58
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Gary Snyder's Vision: Poetry and the Real Work (Literary Frontiers Edition)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 5.87 $A detailed analysis of Snyder's poetry includes a look at his career as a writer and the major themes that appear in his work
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On Bread and Poetry: A Panel Discussion Between Gary Snyder, Lew Welch and Philip Whalen
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 135.99 $In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title!
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Mountains, Rivers, and the Great Earth: Reading Gary Snyder and D?gen in an Age of Ecological Crisis [first edition]
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 30.00 $Engages the global ecological crisis through a radical rethinking of what it means to inhabit the earth.Meditating on the work of American poet and environmental activist Gary Snyder and thirteenth-century Japanese Zen Master Eihei Dōgen, Jason M. Wirth draws out insights for understanding our relation to the planet’s ongoing ecological crisis. He discusses what Dōgen calls “the Great Earth” and what Snyder calls “the Wild” as being comprised of the play of waters and mountains, emptiness and form, and then considers how these ideas can illuminate the spiritual and ethical dimensions of place. The book culminates in a discussion of earth democracy, a place-based sense of communion where all beings are interconnected and all beings matter. This radical rethinking of what it means to inhabit the earth will inspire lovers of Snyder’s poetry, Zen practitioners, environmental philosophers, and anyone concerned about the global ecological crisis.
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The Gary Snyder Reader: Prose, Poetry and Translations 1952-1998
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 63.78 $Gary Snyder has been a major cultural force in America for five decades?prize-winning poet, environmental activist, Zen Buddhist, earth-householder, and reluctant counterculture guru. Having expanded far beyond the Beat scene that first brought his work to the public ear and eye, Snyder has produced a broad-ranging body of work that encompasses his fluency in Eastern literature and culture, his commitment to the environment, and his concepts of humanity’s place in the cosmos.Prose selections include journals from his travels to Saigon, Singapore, Kyoto, Ceylon, New Delhi, and Dharamshala; key interviews from the East West Journal and The Paris Review, meditations on Buddhism and the surrender of self; a cultural survey of communal living; and notes from the lookout tower on Sourdough Mountain, where in stark isolation Snyder once watched for forest fires.The Reader gathers poems from each phase of Snyder’s long career?from his fist collection, Riprap, to the Pulitzer Prize-winning Turtle Island, through his epic poem cycle that was forty years in the making, Mountains and Rivers Without End.From freighter to firetower, Zendo to Himalayan mountain ridge, Snyder’s writings reflect a lifetime of study, journey, and the practice of everyday mindfulness. Gary Snyder has witnessed and captured our culture at the hinge of change and?time and again?his work has transformed us just as it has altered our understanding of literature and place in a purposeful life.
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The Etiquette of Freedom: Gary Snyder, Jim Harrison, and The Practice of the Wild
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 25.38 $NOTE: This ISBN does not include DVD. It is a standalone bookGary Snyder joined his old friend, novelist Jim Harrison, to discuss their loves and lives and what has become of them throughout the years. Set amidst the natural beauty of the Santa Lucia Mountains, their conversations—harnessing their ideas of all that is wild, sacred and intimate in this world—move from the admission that Snyder’s mother was a devout atheist to his personal accounts of his initiation into Zen Buddhist culture, being literally dangled by the ankles over a cliff. After years of living in Japan, Snyder returns to the States to build a farmhouse in the remote foothills of the Sierras, a homestead he calls Kitkitdizze.For all of the depth in these conversations, Jim Harrison and Gary Snyder are humorous and friendly, and with the artfully interspersed dialogue from old friends and loves like Scott Slovic, Michael McClure, Jack Shoemaker, and Joanne Kyger, the discussion reaches a level of not only the personal, but the global, redefining our idea of the Beat Generation and challenging the future directions of the environmental movement and its association with “Deep Ecology.”The Etiquette of Freedom is an all-encompassing companion to the film The Practice of the Wild.
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Poets on the Peaks: Gary Snyder, Philip Whalen and Jack Kerouac
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 64.25 $Based on unpublished letters, journalists, and interviews, this new look at the Beat poets focuses on the Western experiences of seminal American writers--Jack Kerouac, Gary Snyder, and Philip Whalen. Reprint. 25,000 first printing.
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The Selected Letters of Allen Ginsberg and Gary Snyder, 1956-1991
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 84.81 $One of the central relationships in the Beat scene was the long-lasting friendship of Allen Ginsberg and Gary Snyder. Ginsberg introduced Snyder to the East Coast Beat writers, including Jack Kerouac, while Snyder himself became the model for the serious poet that Ginsberg so wanted to become. Snyder encouraged Ginsberg to explore the beauty of the West Coast and, even more lastingly, introduced Ginsberg to Buddhism, the subject of so many long letter exchanges between them. Beginning in 1956 and continuing through 1991, the two men exchanged more than 850 letters. Bill Morgan, Ginsberg’s biographer and an important editor of his papers, has selected the most significant correspondence from this long friendship. The letters themselves paint the biographical and poetic portraits of two of America’s most important—and most fascinating—poets.
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Genesis, Structure, And Meaning In Gary Snyder's Mountains And Rivers Without End Format: Paperback
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 41.04 $When Gary Snyder’s long poem Mountains and Rivers Without End was published in 1996, it was hailed as a masterpiece of American poetry. Anthony Hunt offers a detailed historical and explicative analysis of this complex work using, among his many sources, Snyder’s personal papers, letters, and interviews. Hunt traces the work’s origins, as well as some of the sources of its themes and structure, including Nō drama; East Asian landscape painting; the rhythms of storytelling, chant, and song; Jungian archetypal psychology; world mythology; Buddhist philosophy and ritual; Native American traditions; and planetary geology, hydrology, and ecology. His analysis addresses the poem not merely by its content, but through the structure of individual lines and the arrangement of the parts, examining the personal and cultural influences on Snyder’s work. Hunt’s benchmark study will be rewarding reading for anyone who enjoys the contemplation of Snyder’s artistry and ideas and, more generally, for those who are intrigued by the cultural and intellectual workings of artistic composition.
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Gary Snyder: Dimensions of a Life
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 105.85 $In honor of his 60th birthday (in 1990), the contributions of Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Snyder to contemporary literature and thought are explored and celebrated in reminiscences and essays by writers and environmentalists including Ursula Le Guin, Wendell Berry, Allen Ginsberg, and Dave Foreman. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.
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The Practice of the Wild: Essays by Gary Snyder
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 60.55 $Essays consider nature, wilderness, and man's place in the natural world
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Conversations with Gary Snyder [first edition]
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 25.00 $Gary Snyder (b. 1930) is one of the most distinguished American poets, remarkable both for his long and productive career and for his equal contributions to literature and environmental thought. His childhood in the Pacific Northwest profoundly shaped his sensibility due to his contact with Native American culture and his early awareness of the destruction of the environment by corporations. Although he emerged from the San Francisco Renaissance with writers such as Kenneth Rexroth, Robert Duncan, and William Everson, he became associated with the Beats due to his friendships with Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac, who included a portrait of Snyder as Japhy Ryder in his novel The Dharma Bums. After graduating from Reed College, Snyder became deeply involved with Zen Buddhism, and he spent twelve years in Japan immersed in study.Conversations with Gary Snyder collects interviews from 1961 to 2015 and charts his developing environmental philosophy and his wide-ranging interests in ecology, Buddhism, Native American studies, history, and mythology. The book also demonstrates the ways Snyder has returned throughout his career to key ideas such as the extended family, shamanism, poetics, visionary experience, and caring for the environment as well as his relationship to the Beat movement. Because the book contains interviews spanning more than fifty years, the reader witnesses how Snyder has evolved and grown both as a poet and philosopher of humanity's proper relationship to the cosmos while remaining committed to the issues that preoccupied him as a young man.
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