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Notorious for the delight he took in tweaking the sexual taboos of the Victorian age-as well as the delight he took in the resulting shock of his bashful peers-British adventurer, linguist, and author CAPTAIN SIR RICHARD FRANCIS BURTON (1821-1890) is perhaps best remembered for his unexpurgated translation of the Eastern classic The One Thousand and One Nights, more famously known today as The Arabian Nights.Originating in Persian, Indian, and Arabic sources as far back as the ninth century AD, this collection of bawdy tales-which Burton was the first to bring to English readers in uncensored form-has exerted incalculable influence on modern literature. It represents one of the earliest examples of a framing story, as young Shahrazad, under threat of execution by the King, postpones her death by regaling him with these wildly entertaining stories over the course of 1,001 nights. The stories themselves feature early instances of sexual humor, satire and parody, murder mystery, horror, and even science fiction.Burton's annotated 16-volume collection, as infamous as it is important, was first published between 1885 and 1888, and remains an entertainingly naughty read.Volume II includes:¿ "Nur Al-Din Ali and the Damsel Anis Al-Jalis"¿ "Tale of Ghanim Bin Ayyub, The Distraught, The Thrall O'Love"¿ "Tale of the First Eunich, Baukhayt"¿ "Tale of the Second Eunuch, Kafur"¿ "Tale of King Omar Bin Al-Nu'uman and His Sons Sharrkan and Zau Al-Makan"¿ "Tale of Taj Al-Muluk and the Princess Dunya"¿ "Tale of Aziz and Azizah"
Notorious for the delight he took in tweaking the sexual taboos of the Victorian age-as well as the delight he took in the resulting shock of his bashful peers-British adventurer, linguist, and author CAPTAIN SIR RICHARD FRANCIS BURTON (1821-1890) is perhaps best remembered for his unexpurgated translation of the Eastern classic The One Thousand and One Nights, more famously known today as The Arabian Nights.Originating in Persian, Indian, and Arabic sources as far back as the ninth century AD, this collection of bawdy tales-which Burton was the first to bring to English readers in uncensored form-has exerted incalculable influence on modern literature. It represents one of the earliest examples of a framing story, as young Shahrazad, under threat of execution by the King, postpones her death by regaling him with these wildly entertaining stories over the course of 1,001 nights. The stories themselves feature early instances of sexual humor, satire and parody, murder mystery, horror, and even science fiction.Burton's annotated 16-volume collection, as infamous as it is important, was first published between 1885 and 1888, and remains an entertainingly naughty read.Volume I includes:¿ Burton's introductory forward¿ "Story of King Shahryar and His Brother"¿ "Tale of the Trader and the Jinni"¿ "Tale of the Wazir and the Sage Duban"¿ "Tale of the Prince and the Ogress"¿ "Tale of the Ensorcelled Prince"¿ "The Porter and the Three Ladies of Baghdad"¿ "Tale of the Three Apples"¿ "The Reeve's Tale"¿ "Tale of the Jewish Doctor"¿ and others.
An easy-to-digest introduction the ¿science of the experience of consciousness¿ as the German Idealist philosopher GEORG WILHELM FRIEDRICH HEGEL (1770¿1831) understood it, this condensed version of Hegel¿s The Phenomenology of Spirit¿which the author created himself for his Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences¿explores Hegel¿s take on:¿ what mind is¿ the sensibility of the ¿physical soul¿¿ the immediacy of the ¿feeling soul¿¿ consciousness and the intellect¿ the theoretical mind¿ memory, intuition, and imagination¿ the morality of conscience¿ moral life, or social ethics¿ revealed religion in the ¿absolute mind¿¿ and much more.This 1894 translation of the 1827¿1830 German original, by Scottish philosopher and Oxford University professor WILLIAM WALLACE (1843¿1897), remains a favorite of Hegel students, and is celebrated for its style and eloquence.
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