· 6 years ago · Aug 01, 2019, 12:54 PM
1
2
3 WHAT DO YOU LIKE?
4
5 WHY DO YOU LIKE IT?
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7 WHAT DO YOU DISLIKE?
8
9 WHY DON'T YOU LIKE IT?
10
11
12English : Everyman's Library, Oxford World's Classics, Penguin, Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought, Hackett
13
14Deutsch : Fischer Klassik, Reclam
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16Français : Les Belles Lettres
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18
19--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
20
21 NOW READING
22
23- Sun Tzu : The Art of War
24
25- George Orwell : Animal Farm
26- George Orwell : 1984
27- Aldous Huxley : Brave New World
28- Arthur Koestler : Darkness at Noon
29- Ray Bradbury : Fahrenheit 451
30
31--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
32
33- Boogiepop Omnibus Vol. 1
34- Boogiepop Omnibus Vol. 2
35- Boogiepop Omnibus Vol. 3
36- Boogiepop Omnibus Vol. 4
37- Boogiepop Omnibus Vol. 5
38- Boogiepop Omnibus Vol. 6
39
40--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
41
42- Daniel Keyes : Flowers for Algernon (S.F. MASTERWORKS)
43
44- Dangerous Visions (S.F. MASTERWORKS)
45
46- Harlan Ellison : The Beast That Shouted Love at the Heart of the World: Stories ( ??? )
47- Harlan Ellison : Alone Against Tomorrow ( ??? )
48
49--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
50
51- Devilman: The Classic Collection Vol. 1
52- Devilman: The Classic Collection Vol. 2
53
54--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
55
56- Harlan Ellison : Deathbird Stories ( ??? )
57- Harlan Ellison : Shatterday
58
59--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
60
61- Akira Vol. 1 ( ! )
62- Akira Vol. 2 ( ! )
63- Akira Vol. 3 ( ! )
64- Akira Vol. 4 ( ! )
65- Akira Vol. 5 ( ! )
66- Akira Vol. 6 ( ! )
67
68--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
69
70- Philip K. Dick : Human Is? : A Philip K. Dick Reader ( GOLLANCZ S.F. ) ( ! )
71- Philip K. Dick : A Scanner Darkly ( ! )
72- Philip K. Dick : Ubik ( ! )
73- Philip K. Dick : Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? ( ! )
74
75--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
76
77 - FLCL ( Manga )
78
79--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
80
81- William Gibson : Burning Chrome (Short Story Collection) ( ! )
82- William Gibson : Neuromancer ( ! )
83- William Gibson : Count Zero ( ! )
84- William Gibson : Mona Lisa Overdrive ( ! )
85
86--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
87
88 - Ghost in the Shell ( ! )
89 - Ghost in the Shell 2: Man-Machine Interface ( ! )
90 - Ghost in the Shell 1.5: Human-Error Processor ( ! )
91
92--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
93
94- Ted Kaczynski : Industrial Society and Its Future ( ! )
95
96- Fyodor Dostoevsky ( 1821 - 1881 ) : Notes From The Underground (Everyman's Library) ( ! )
97
98- Vladimir Nabokov : Pnin ( ! )
99- Vladimir Nabokov : Lolita ( ! )
100
101- Knut Hamsun : Hunger ( ! )
102- Knut Hamsun : Mysteries ( ! )
103- Knut Hamsun : Pan ( ! )
104- Knut Hamsun : Victoria ( ! )
105
106- Louis-Ferdinand Celine : Journey to the End of the Night (Alma Classics) ( ! )
107- Louis-Ferdinand Celine : Death on Credit (Alma Classics) ( ! )
108
109- Jean-Paul Sartre : Nausea (Penguin Modern Classics) ( ! )
110
111- Albert Camus : The Outsider (Everyman's Library Classics) ( ! )
112- Albert Camus : Plague, Fall, Exile And The Kingdom And Selected Essays (Everyman's Library Contemporary Classics) ( ! )
113- Albert Camus : The Rebel (Penguin Modern Classics) ( ! )
114- Albert Camus : The First Man (Penguin Modern Classics) ( ! )
115- Albert Camus : Happy Death (Penguin Modern Classics) ( ! )
116
117--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
118
119- Blame! Master Edition, Vol. 1 ( ! )
120- Blame! Master Edition, Vol. 2 ( ! )
121- Blame! Master Edition, Vol. 3 ( ! )
122- Blame! Master Edition, Vol. 4 ( ! )
123- Blame! Master Edition, Vol. 5 ( ! )
124- Blame! Master Edition, Vol. 6 ( ! )
125
126--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
127
128- Guy Debord : Society of the Spectacle ( ! )
129- Guy Debord : Comments on the Society of the Spectacle ( ! )
130- Raoul Vaneigem : The Revolution of Everyday Life ( ! )
131
132--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
133
134- Ernest Hemingway : The Sun Also Rises ( ! )
135- Ernest Hemingway : Farewell To Arms ( ! )
136- Ernest Hemingway : For Whom The Bell Tolls ( ! )
137- Ernest Hemingway : The Old Man and the Sea ( ! )
138- Ernest Hemingway : The Collected Stories (Everyman's Library Classics) ( ! )
139
140- The H. P. Lovecraft ( 1890 - 1937 ) Collection ( ! )
141
142- Michel Houllebecq : H.P. Lovecraft: Against the World, Against Life ( ! )
143- Michel Houllebecq : Whatever ( ! )
144- Michel Houllebecq : Atomised ( ! )
145- Michel Houllebecq : Platform ( ! )
146- Michel Houllebecq : Lanzarote ( ! )
147- Michel Houllebecq : The Map and the Territory ( ! )
148- Michel Houllebecq : Submission ( ! )
149- Michel Houllebecq : Serotonin ( ! )
150
151- Fritz Zorn : Mars ( ! )
152
153- Wyndham Lewis : Tarr : The 1918 Version ( ! )
154
155- Fernando Pessoa : The Book of Disquiet (Penguin Modern Classics) ( ! )
156
157---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
158
159- Film History : An Introduction ( ! )
160- Film Art : An Introduction ( ! )
161
162- Sidney Lumet : Making Movies ( ! )
163- Andrey Tarkovsky : Sculpting in Time: Reflections on the Cinema ( ! )
164- Robert Bresson : Notes on the Cinematograph (New York Review Books Classics) ( ! )
165- André Bazin : What Is Cinema? ( Vol. 1 ) ( ! )
166- André Bazin : What Is Cinema? ( Vol. 2 ) ( ! )
167
168--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF FILM 101
169
170- Mortimer J. Adler : How to Read a Book ( ! )
171- Barbara Oakley : Mind for Numbers: How to Excel at Math and Science (Even If You Flunked Algebra) ( ! )
172
173- The Trivium : The Liberal Arts of Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric ( ! )
174
175- Sydney & Nelson : An Introduction to English Grammar ( ! )
176- Thomas E. Payne : Understanding English Grammar: A Linguistic Introduction ( ! )
177
178- W. Edgar Moore : Creative & Critical Thinking ( ??? )
179- Irving Copi : Introduction to Logic ( ! )
180
181- Edward P.J. Corbett : Classical Rhetoric for the Modern Student ( ! )
182- Thomas S. Kane : The New Oxford Guide to Writing ( ! )
183
184--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF TRIVIUM
185
186- Creators, Conquerors, and Citizens : A History of Ancient Greece ( ! )
187
188- The Library of Greek Mythology (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
189- The Greek Myths : The Complete and Definitive Edition ( ! )
190
191- Hesiod ( c. 750 - c. 650 BC ) : Theogony. Works and Days. Testimonia: 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
192- Hesiod : The Shield. Catalogue of Women. Other Fragments: 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
193
194- Aesop's Fables (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
195
196- Constellation Myths : with Aratus' Phaenomena (Oxford World's Classics)
197
198--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF GREECE 101
199
200- Michael Schmidt : The First Poets: Lives of the Ancient Greek Poets ( ! )
201
202- Barry Strauss : The Trojan War: A New History ( ! )
203
204- Iliász ( Devecseri Gábor )
205- The Iliad (Everyman's Library Classics) ( Fitzgerald ) ( ! )
206- The Iliad ( Lattimore ) ( ! )
207- A Companion to the "Iliad": Based on the Translation by Richard Lattimore (Phoenix Books) ( ! )
208- The Iliad ( Stanley Lombardo ) ( Hackett Classics ) ( ! )
209- The Iliad ( Alexander Pope ) ( ! )
210
211- The Iliad, Vol. 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
212- The Iliad, Vol. 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
213
214- Odüsszeia ( Devecseri Gábor )
215- The Odyssey (Everyman's Library Classics Series) ( Fitzgerald ) ( ! )
216- The Odyssey ( Lattimore ) ( ! )
217- Homer's "Odyssey" : A Companion to the English Translation of Richmond Lattimore (Classics companions) ( ! )
218- The Odyssey ( Stanley Lombardo ) ( Hackett Classics ) ( ! )
219- The Odyssey ( Alexander Pope ) ( ! )
220
221- The Odyssey, Vol. 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
222- The Odyssey, Vol. 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
223
224--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF HOMER
225
226- Greek Lyric Poetry : Volume I. Sappho and Alcaeus (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
227- Greek Lyric Poetry : Volume II. Anacreon, Anacreontea, Choral Lyric from Olympus to Alcman (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
228- Greek Lyric Poetry : Volume III. Stesichorus, Ibycus, Simonides, and Others (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
229
230- Greek Elegiac Poetry : From the Seventh to the Fifth Centuries BC. Tyrtaeus, Solon, Theognis, and Others (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
231
232- Greek Iambic Poetry : From the Seventh to the Fifth Centuries BC. Archilochus, Semonides, Hipponax, and Others (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
233
234- Pindar : Works, Vol. 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
235- Pindar : Works, Vol. 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
236
237- Theocritus. Moschus. Bion (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
238
239- Callimachus : Hymns, Epigrams. Phaenomena. Alexandra (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
240- Callimachus : Aetia, Iambi, Hecale and Other Fragments. Hero and Leander (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
241
242- Apollonius of Rhodes ( Early 3rd century BCE – Late 3rd century BCE ) : Argonautica ( William H. Race ) (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
243
244--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF GREEK POETRY + ARGONAUTICA
245
246- Herodotus ( c. 484 BC – c. 425 BC ) : The Histories (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
247- The Landmark Herodotus: The Histories (Landmark Books) ( ! )
248
249- Thucydides: The War of the Peloponnesians and the Athenians (Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought) ( ! )
250
251- Xenophon ( c. 431 BC – 354 BC ) : A History of My Times ( Hellenica ) ( Landmark ) ( ! )
252- Xenophon : The Expedition of Cyrus (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
253- Xenophon : Memorabilia. Oeconomicus. Symposium. Apology: 4 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
254- Xenophon : Scripta Minora: 007 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
255
256- Arrian ( c. 90 – c. 163 ) : Alexander the Great The Anabasis and the Indica (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
257- The Landmark Arrian:The Campaigns of Alexander the Great (Landmark (Anchor Books)) ( ! )
258
259--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF GREEK HISTORIANS
260
261- Aeschylus ( c. 523 BC – c. 456 BC ) : I, Persians. Seven against Thebes. Suppliants. Prometheus Bound (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
262- Aeschylus : II, The Oresteia : Agamemnon. Libation-Bearers. Eumenides (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
263
264- Euripides ( c. 480 BC – c. 406 BC ) : Vol. 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
265- Euripides : Vol. 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
266- Euripides : Vol. 3 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
267- Euripides : Vol. 4 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
268- Euripides : Vol. 5 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
269- Euripides : Vol. 6 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
270
271- Sophocles ( c. 497 BC – c. 405 BC ) : Vol. 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
272- Sophocles : Vol. 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
273
274- Aristophanes ( c. 446 BC – c. 386 BC ) : Vol. 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
275- Aristophanes : Vol. 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
276- Aristophanes : Vol. 3 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
277- Aristophanes : Vol. 4 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
278
279--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF GREEK TRAGEDIES AND COMEDIES
280
281- Bryan Magee : The Story of Philosophy ( ! )
282
283- The Texts of Early Greek Philosophy: The Complete Fragments and Selected Testimonies of the Major Presocratics ( ! )
284
285- Plato ( c. 427 BC – c. 347 BC ) : Complete Works (Edited by : John M. Cooper) ( ! )
286
287- Philosopher-Kings : The Argument of Plato's "Republic" ( ! )
288
289--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF PRESOCRATICS + PLATO
290
291- Aristotle ( 384 BC – 322 BC ) : The Complete Works of Aristotle Vol. 1 (Revised Oxford) ( ! )
292- Aristotle : The Complete Works of Aristotle Vol. 2 (Revised Oxford) ( ! )
293
294- Joe Sachs : Aristotle's Metaphysics ( ! )
295- Aristotle's "Politics" : Second Edition ( University of Chicago Press ) ( ! )
296
297- Theophrastus: "Characters", "Herodas Mimes", "Sophron" and Other Mime Fragments (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
298
299- Diogenes of Sinope : Sayings and Anecdotes with Other Popular Moralists (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
300
301----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF ARISTOTLE AND OTHERS
302
303- Aeschines : Collected Works (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
304
305- Lysias : Collected Works (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
306
307- Isocrates : Collected Works, Vol. 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
308- Isocrates : Collected Works, Vol. 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
309- Isocrates : Collected Works, Vol. 3 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
310
311- Isaeus : Collected Works (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
312
313- Demosthenes : Volume I (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
314- Demosthenes : Volume II (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
315- Demosthenes : Volume III (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
316- Demosthenes : Volume IV (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
317- Demosthenes : Volume V (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
318- Demosthenes : Volume VI (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
319- Demosthenes : Volume VII (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
320
321- Minor Attic Orators : v. 1 ( Antiphon and Andocides ) (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
322- Minor Attic Orators : v. 2 ( Lycurgus. Dinarchus. Demades. Hyperides ) (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
323
324----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF ATTIC ORATORS
325
326- The Essential Epicurus ( 341 BC – 270 BC ) : Letters, Principal Doctrines, Vatican Sayings, and Fragments (Great Books in Philosophy) ( ! )
327- The Epicurus Reader: Selected Writings and Testimonia (HPC Classics) ( ! )
328- Lucretius ( c. 99 BC – c. 55 BC ) : On the Nature of Things (Hackett Classics) ( ! )
329- Lucretius : De Rerum Natura (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
330
331----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF EPICUREANISM
332
333- A Brief History of the Romans ( ! )
334- The Romans: From Village to Empire: A History of Rome from Earliest Times to the End of the Western Empire ( ! )
335- Themes in Roman Society and Culture: An Introduction to Ancient Rome (Classical Studies) ( ! )
336
337- Adrian Goldsworthy : Caesar ( ! )
338- Adrian Goldsworthy : Augustus: From Revolutionary to Emperor ( ! )
339
340- Alison E. Cooley : Res Gestae Divi Augusti: Text, Translation, and Commentary ( ! )
341
342----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF ROME 101
343
344- Plautus : Works, Vol. 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
345- Plautus : Works, Vol. 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
346- Plautus : Works, Vol. 3 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
347- Plautus : Works, Vol. 4 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
348- Plautus : Works, Vol. 5 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
349
350- Polybius ( c. 208 BC – c. 125 BC ) : Histories ( ! )
351
352- Terence : Volume I. The Woman of Andros. The Self-Tormentor. The Eunuch (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
353- Terence : Volume II. Phormio. The Mother-in-Law. The Brothers (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
354
355- Vergilius ( 70 BC – 19 BC ) : Volume I. Eclogues. Georgics. Aeneid, Books 1–6 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
356- Vergilius : Volume II. Aeneid Books 7–12, Appendix Vergiliana (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
357- Vergilius : The Aeneid ( Fitzgerald ) ( Everyman's ) ( ! )
358
359- Horace ( 65 BC – 8 BC ) : Odes and Epodes (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
360- Horace : Satires, Epistles, Ars Poetica (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
361
362- Juvenal and Persius (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
363
364- Livy ( 64 or 59 BC – 12 or 17 AD ) : The Rise of Rome : Books 1-5 (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
365- Livy : Rome's Italian Wars : Books 6-10 (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
366- Livy : Hannibal's War : Books 21-30 (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
367- Livy : The Dawn of the Roman Empire : Books 31-40 (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
368- Livy : Rome's Mediterranean Empire : Books 41-45 and the Periochae (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
369
370- Ovidius ( 43 BC – 17 or 18 AD ) : Heroides and Amores (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
371- Ovidius : Art of Love & Other Poems (Loeb Classical Library 232) ( ! )
372- Ovidius : The Metamorphoses ( Mandelbaum ) (Everymans Library) ( ! )
373- Ovidius : Metamorphoses ( Books I-VIII ) (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
374- Ovidius : Metamorphoses ( Books IX-XV ) (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
375- Ovidius : Fasti (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
376- Ovidius : Tristia (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
377
378- The Poems of Catullus ( w/ Parallel Latin Text ) (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
379
380- Propertius : Elegies (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
381
382- Complete Poems of Tibullus ( University of California Press ) ( ! )
383
384- Julius Caesar ( 100 BC – 44 BC ): The Gallic War : 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
385- Julius Caesar : Civil War : 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
386- Julius Caesar : Alexandrian, African and Spanish Wars (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
387- The Landmark Julius Caesar: The Gallic Wars and The Civil War ( ! )
388
389- Cicero ( 106 BC – 43 BC ) : Political Speeches (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
390- Cicero : Defence Speeches (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
391- Cicero : Selected Letters (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
392- Cicero : The Nature of the Gods (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
393- Cicero : On Life and Death (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
394- Cicero : The Republic and The Laws (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
395- Cicero : On Obligations De Officiis (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
396
397- Cicero : Volume X. In Catilinam 1–4. Pro Murena. Pro Sulla. Pro Flacco (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
398- Cicero : Volume XVa. Philippics 1-6 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
399- Cicero : Volume XVb. Philippics 7-14 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
400
401- Cicero : Volume XVIII. Tusculan Disputations (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
402- Cicero : Volume XX. On Old Age (De Senectute). On Friendship (De Amicitia). On Divination (De Divinatione) (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
403
404- Sallust ( 86 or 87 BC – c. 35 BC ) : Catiline's Conspiracy, The Jugurthine War, Histories (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
405
406- Apuleius : Metamorphoses I, Books I-VI (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
407- Apuleius : Metamorphoses II. Books VII-XI (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
408- Apuleius : Apologia. Florida. De Deo Socratis (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
409
410- Suetonius : Lives of the Caesars (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
411
412- Lucan : The Civil War (Pharsalia) (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
413
414- Martial : Epigrams, Vol. 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
415- Martial : Epigrams, Vol. 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
416- Martial : Epigrams, Vol. 3 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
417
418- Pliny the Younger ( 61 AD - c. 113 AD ) : Complete Letters (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
419
420- Statius : Volume I. Silvae (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
421- Statius : Volume II. Thebaid, Books 1–7 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
422- Statius : Volume III. Thebaid, Books 8–12. Achilleid (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
423
424- Tacitus ( c. 56 AD - c. 120 AD ) : Volume I. Agricola. Germania. Dialogue on Oratory (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
425- Tacitus : Volume II. Histories 1–3 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
426- Tacitus : Volume III. Histories 4–5. Annals 1–3 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
427- Tacitus : Volume IV. Annals 4–6, 11–12 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
428- Tacitus : Volume V. Annals 13–16 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
429
430- Josephus : The Jewish War (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
431
432- Petronius : Satyricon; Seneca : Apocolocyntosis (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
433
434-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
435
436- Seneca ( c. 4 BC - 65 AD ) : Vol. 1, Moral Essays 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
437- Seneca : Vol. 1, Moral Essays 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
438- Seneca : Vol. 1, Moral Essays 3 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
439- Seneca : Vol. 1, Epistles 1-65 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
440- Seneca : Vol. 1, Epistles 66-92 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
441- Seneca : Vol. 1, Epistles 93-124 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
442- Seneca : Vol. 1, Tragedies 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
443- Seneca : Vol. 1, Tragedies 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
444
445- Epictetus ( c. 55 AD - 135 AD ) : Discourses, Fragments, Handbook ( Oxford World's Classics ) ( ! )
446
447- Marcus Aurelius ( 121 AD - 180 AD ) : Meditations : A New Translation (Modern Library Classics) ( ! )
448- Marcus Aurelius : Elmélkedések
449- Marcus Aurelius : Works (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
450
451----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF STOICISM
452
453- Plutarch ( c. 46 AD - c. 120 AD ) : Parallel Lives : Volume I (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
454- Plutarch : Parallel Lives : Volume II (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
455- Plutarch : Parallel Lives : Volume III (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
456- Plutarch : Parallel Lives : Volume IV (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
457- Plutarch : Parallel Lives : Volume V (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
458- Plutarch : Parallel Lives : Volume VI (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
459- Plutarch : Parallel Lives : Volume VII (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
460- Plutarch : Parallel Lives : Volume VIII (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
461- Plutarch : Parallel Lives : Volume IX (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
462- Plutarch : Parallel Lives : Volume X (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
463- Plutarch : Parallel Lives : Volume XI (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
464
465- Quintillian ( c. 35 AD - c. 100 AD ) : The Orator's Education: Volume I. Books 1–2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
466- Quintillian : The Orator's Education: Volume II. Books 3–5 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
467- Quintillian : The Orator's Education: Volume III. Books 6–8 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
468- Quintillian : The Orator's Education: Volume IV. Books 9–10 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
469- Quintillian : The Orator's Education: Volume V. Books 11–12 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
470- Quintillian : The Lesser Declamations: Volume I (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
471- Quintillian : The Lesser Declamations: Volume II (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
472
473- Appian : Works, Vol. 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
474- Appian : Works, Vol. 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
475- Appian : Works, Vol. 3 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
476- Appian : Works, Vol. 4 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
477
478- Aulus Gellius : Attic Nights, Vol. 1 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
479- Aulus Gellius : Attic Nights, Vol. 2 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
480- Aulus Gellius : Attic Nights, Vol. 3 (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
481
482----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF THE GRECO-ROMAN ERA
483
484- Neoplatonism (Bristol Classical Paperbacks) ( ! )
485- Neoplatonic Philosophy: Introductory Readings ( ! )
486
487- Nature, Contemplation and the One : A Study in the Philosophy of Plotinus ( ! )
488- Cambridge Companion to Plotinus (Cambridge Companions to Philosophy) ( ! )
489
490- Plotinus ( 204/205 AD - 270 AD ) : The Enneads ( Edited by : Lloyd P. Gerson ) ( ! )
491
492- Plotinus the Platonist (Bloomsbury Studies in Ancient Philosophy) - Paperback ( ! )
493- Plato and Plotinus on Mysticism, Epistemology, and Ethics (Bloomsbury Studies in Ancient Philosophy) ( ! )
494
495- Porphyry's Introduction (Clarendon Later Ancient Philosophers) ( ! )
496
497- Iamblichus : On the Mysteries (Writings from the Greco-Roman World) ( ! )
498
499- Proclus : An Introduction ( ! )
500- The Elements of Theology: A Revised Text with Translation, Introduction, and Commentary (Clarendon Paperbacks) ( ! )
501- Theology of Plato ( Thomas Taylor ) ( ! )
502
503----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF NEOPLATONISM
504
505
506- John Keay : India : A History ( ! )
507
508- An Introduction to Hinduism 1ed (Introduction to Religion) ( ! )
509
510- The Myths and Gods of India: The Classic Work on Hindu Polytheism from the Princeton Bollingen Series: The Classic Work of Hindu Polytheism ( ! )
511
512- The Rig Veda (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
513- Upanisads (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
514
515- Manu's Code of Law: A Critical Edition and Translation of the Manava-Dharmasastra (South Asia Research) ( ! )
516
517- Pancatantra : The Book of India's Folk Wisdom (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
518
519- The Bhagavad Gita (Norton Critical Editions) ( ! )
520- Bhagavad Gita
521
522- The Ramayana (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
523- The Mahabharata (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
524
525- King, Governance, and Law in Ancient India : Kautilya's Arthasastra ( ! )
526- Chanakya Neeti ( Manoj Publications ) ( ! )
527
528- Yoga Sutras of Patañjali ( EDWIN F. BRYANT ) ( ! )
529
530- The Complete Kama Sutra : The First Unabridged Modern Translation of the Classic Indian Text ( ! )
531
532- Hiriyanna : The Essentials of Indian Philosophy ( ! )
533- Essential Vedanta : A New Source Book of Advaita Vedanta (Treasures of the World's Religions) ( ! )
534
535- Eight Upanishads, with the Commentary of Sankaracarya, Vol. I ( ! )
536- Eight Upanishads, with the Commentary of Sankara, Vol. II ( ! )
537
538- Chandogya Upanishad - With the Commentary of Shankaracharya ( ! )
539- Adi Shankara's Brihadaranyaka Upanishad commentary ( ? )
540
541- Brahma Sutra Bhasya Of Shankaracharya ( ! )
542
543- Gambhirananda : Bhagavad-Gita ( w/ the commentary of Adi Shankara ) ( ! )
544
545- Upadesa Sahasri: A Thousand Teachings ( ! )
546- Self-Knowledge: Atmabodha ( ! )
547- Shankara's Crest-Jewel of Discrimination: Timeless Teachings on Nonduality ( ! )
548
549--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF HINDUISM
550
551- An Introduction to Buddhism, Second Edition: Teachings, History and Practices (Introduction to Religion) ( ! )
552
553- In the Buddha's Words: An Anthology of Discourses from the Pali Canon
554- The Dhammapada ( by John Ross Carter ) ( ! )
555- The Jatakas : Birth Stories of the Bodhisatta (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
556
557- The Buddhist Cosmos: A Comprehensive Survey of the Early Buddhist Worldview ( ! )
558
559- Milindapanha ( English or German? Which edition? ) ( ! )
560
561---------------------------------------------------------------------------
562
563- The Awakening of Faith : Attributed to Asvaghosha (Translations from the Asian Classics) ( ! )
564
565- The Lotus Sutra (BDK English Tripitaka) ( ! )
566- The Heart Sutra ( Red Pine ) ( ! )
567- The Diamond Sutra ( Red Pine ) ( ! )
568- The Sutra of Queen Srimala of the Lion's Roar AND The Vimalakirti Sutra (BDK English Tripitaka Series) ( ! )
569
570- The Mind Illuminated : A Complete Meditation Guide Integrating Buddhist Wisdom and Brain Science for Greater Mindfulness ( ! )
571
572---------------------------------------------------------------------------
573
574- Nagarjuna's Middle Way: The Mulamadhyamakakarika (Classics of Indian Buddhism) ( ! )
575- Nagarjuna's Seventy Stanzas: A Buddhist Psychology of Emptiness ( ! )
576- The Dispeller of Disputes: Nagarjuna's Vigrahavyavartani ( ! )
577- Crushing the Categories (Vaidalyaprakarana) (Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences) ( ! )
578- Nagarjuna's "Reason Sixty" (Yuktisastika) with Candrakirti's Commentary (Yuktisastikavrrti) (Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences) ( ! )
579- Nagarjuna's Precious Garland: Buddhist Advice for Living and Liberation ( ! )
580
581- Aryadeva's Four Hundred Stanzas on the Middle Way (Textual Studies and Translations in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism) ( ! )
582
583---------------------------------------------------------------------------
584
585- Lankavatara Sutra ( ! )
586
587- The Zen Teachings of Bodhidharma ( ! )
588
589- Platform Sutra, The: The ZEN Teaching of Hui-Neng ( ! )
590
591- The Record of Linji: A New Translation Of The Linjilu In The Light Of Ten Japanese Zen Commentaries ( ! )
592
593- The Gateless Gate ( ! )
594- Blue Cliff Record ( ! )
595
596- Master Dogen's Shobogenzo : Vol. 1 ( ! )
597- Master Dogen's Shobogenzo : Vol. 2 ( ! )
598- Master Dogen's Shobogenzo : Vol. 3 ( ! )
599- Master Dogen's Shobogenzo : Vol. 4 ( ! )
600
601- Complete Poison Blossoms from a Thicket of Thorn: The Zen Records of Hakuin Ekaku ( ! )
602
603---------------------------------------------------------------------------
604
605- The Pratyutpanna Samadhi Sutra AND The Surangama Samadhi Sutra (BDK English Tripitaka Series) ( ! )
606- The Three Pure Land Sutras (BDK English Tripitaka Translation Series) ( ! )
607
608---------------------------------------------------------------------------
609
610- Kukai Major Works (Translations from the Asian Classics) ( ! )
611- The Weaving of Mantra: Kûkai and the Construction of Esoteric Buddhist Discourse: Kukai and the Construction of Esoteric Buddhist Discourse ( ! )
612
613- The Tibetan Book of the Dead: First Complete Translation ( ! )
614
615--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF BUDDHISM 101
616
617 - Jainism 101 ( ??? ) ( ! )
618
619 - Sikhism 101 ( ??? ) ( ! )
620
621----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF JAINISM 101 AND SIKHISM 101
622
623- John Keay : China : A History ( ! )
624
625- Confucianism : An Introduction (I.B.Tauris Introductions to Religion) ( ! )
626
627- Ta Hsueh and Chung Yung: The Highest Order of Cultivation AND On the Practice of the Mean (Penguin Classics)
628- Analects: With Selections from Traditional Commentaries (Hackett Classics Series)
629- Mengzi: With Selections from Traditional Commentaries (Hackett Classics) ( ! )
630
631--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF CONFUCIANISM ============== !!!NÉMET NYELV DEADLINE!!!
632
633- Daoism : An Introduction (I.B. Tauris Introductions to Religion) ( ! )
634
635- Tao Te Ching (D.C. Lau edition)
636- Lao-Tzu's Taoteching ( Red Pine ) ( ! )
637- Tao te king: Das Buch vom Sinn und Leben ( ! )
638
639- The Complete Works of Zhuangzi (Translations from the Asian Classics) ( ! )
640- The Book of Chuang Tzu
641- Zhuangzi (Brook Ziporyn edition)
642
643- The Book of Lieh-Tzu: A Classic of the Tao (Translations from the Oriental Classics) ( ! )
644- Das wahre Buch vom quellenden Urgrund ( ! )
645
646- The Classic of Changes : A New Translation of the I Ching as Interpreted by Wang Bi (Translations from the Asian Classic) ( ! )
647- I Ging : Das Buch der Wandlungen
648
649- Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
650
651- Krasznahorkai László : Az urgai fogoly ( ! )
652- Krasznahorkai László : Rombolás és bánat az Ég alatt ( ! )
653
654--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF TAOISM
655
656- R.H.P. Mason & J.G. Caiger : History of Japan ( ! )
657
658- The Essence of Shinto : Japan's Spiritual Heart ( ! )
659
660- Handbook of Japanese Mythology (Handbooks of World Mythology) ( ! )
661
662- The Book of Tea ( ! )
663
664- A Discourse by Three Drunkards on Government ( ! )
665
666- The Tale of Genji (Roughcut) (Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition) ( ! )
667- The Diary of Lady Murasaki (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
668
669- The Gossamer Years: The Diary of a Noblewoman of Heian Japan (Tuttle Classics) ( ! )
670
671- The Pillow Book (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
672
673- As I Crossed a Bridge of Dreams : Recollections of a Woman in 11th-Century Japan (Penguin Classics) ( A.K.A. Sarashina Nikki ) ( ! )
674- A Tale of Eleventh-Century Japan: Hamamatsu Chunagon Monogatari (Princeton Legacy Library) ( ! )
675
676-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
677
678- Hojoki: Visions of a Torn World (Rock Spring Collection of Japanese Literature) ( ! )
679
680- Essays in Idleness: The Tsurezuregusa of Kenko (Translations from the Asian Classics) ( ! )
681
682- The Tales of Ise (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
683
684- The Tale of the Heike (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
685
686- Ihara Saikaku : Five Women Who Loved Love : Amorous Tales from 17th-Century Japan (Tuttle Classics) ( ! )
687
688- Ueda Akinari : Tales of Moonlight and Rain (Translations from the Asian Classics) ( ! )
689
690- Pagoda, Skull & Samurai (Tuttle Classics of Japanese Literature) ( ! )
691
692- In the Shade of Spring Leaves: The Life and Writings of Higuchi Ichiyo, a Woman of Letters in Meiji Japan ( ! )
693
694- Traditional Japanese Theater: An Anthology of Plays (Translations from the Asian Classics) ( ! )
695
696- Tōson Shimazaki : The Broken Commandment (UNESCO Collection of Representative Works) ( ! )
697
698- Ryūnosuke Akutagawa : Short Stories ( ! )
699
700- Once and Forever : The Tales of Kenji Miyazawa (New York Review Books Classics) ( ! )
701
702- Natsume Sōseki : Kokoro ( ! )
703- Natsume Sōseki : Sanshiro ( ! )
704- Natsume Sōseki : Botchan ( ! )
705- Natsume Sōseki : I Am a Cat ( ! )
706- Natsume Sōseki : The Gate (New York Review Books Classics) ( ! )
707- Natsume Sōseki : Ten Nights of Dreams ( ! )
708
709-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
710
711- Blue Bamboo: Tales by Dazai Osamu ( ! )
712- Crackling Mountain and Other Stories (Paperback) ( ! )
713- Osamu Dazai : No Longer Human ( ! )
714- Osamu Dazai : Setting Sun (New Directions Book) ( ! )
715- Osamu Dazai : Schoolgirl (Modern Japanese Classics) ( ! )
716
717- Hagakure : Secret Wisdom of the Samurai ( ! )
718
719- Eiji Yoshikawa : Musashi: An Epic Novel of the Samurai Era ( ! )
720
721- Miyamoto Musashi : The Book of Five Rings ( ! )
722
723-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
724
725- Yasunari Kawabata : The Dancing Girl of Izu ( ! )
726- Yasunari Kawabata : Snow Country ( ! )
727- Yasunari Kawabata : The Master of Go ( ! )
728- Yasunari Kawabata : Thousand Cranes ( ! )
729- Yasunari Kawabata : The Sound of the Mountain (Penguin Modern Classics) ( ! )
730- Yasunari Kawabata : The Lake ( ! )
731- Yasunari Kawabata : The Old Capital ( ! )
732- Yasunari Kawabata : Beauty and Sadness (Penguin Modern Classics) ( ! )
733- Yasunari Kawabata : The House of the Sleeping Beauties ( ! )
734
735-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
736
737- Junichiro Tanizaki : Seven Japanese Tales (Vintage International) ( ! )
738- Junichiro Tanizaki : Quicksand (Vintage Classics) ( ! )
739- Junichiro Tanizaki : Naomi (Vintage International) ( ! )
740- Junichiro Tanizaki : Some Prefer Nettles ( ! )
741- Junichiro Tanizaki : A Cat, a Man, and Two Women ( ! )
742- Junichiro Tanizaki : In Praise of Shadows ( ! )
743- Junichiro Tanizaki : The Makioka Sisters ( ! )
744- Junichiro Tanizaki : The Key ( ! )
745- Junichiro Tanizaki : Diary Of A Mad Old Man (Vintage Classics) ( ! )
746
747-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
748
749- Yukio Mishima : The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea ( ! )
750- Yukio Mishima : The Sound of Waves ( ! )
751- Yukio Mishima : The Temple of the Golden Pavilion ( ! )
752- Yukio Mishima : Patriotism ( ! )
753- Yukio Mishima : Confessions of a Mask ( ! )
754- Yukio Mishima : Sun and Steel ( PDF )
755- Yukio Mishima : After the Banquet ( ! )
756- Yukio Mishima : Thirst for Love (Vintage Classics) ( ! )
757- Yukio Mishima : The Frolic of the Beasts ( ! )
758- Yukio Mishima : Forbidden Colours (Penguin Modern Classics) ( ! )
759- Yukio Mishima : Acts of Worship: Seven Stories ( ! )
760- Yukio Mishima : Death in Midsummer & Other Stories ( ! )
761- Yukio Mishima : Spring Snow (The Sea of Fertility) ( ! )
762- Yukio Mishima : Runaway Horses (The Sea of Fertility) ( ! )
763- Yukio Mishima : The Temple Of Dawn (The Sea of Fertility) ( ! )
764- Yukio Mishima : The Decay Of The Angel (The Sea of Fertility) ( ! )
765
766- Krasznahorkai László : Északról hegy, Délről tó, Nyugatról utak, Keletről folyó ( ! )
767- Krasznahorkai László : Seiobo járt odalent ( ! )
768
769--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF SHINTOISM + JAPANESE /LIT/ 101
770
771- Norse Mythology: A Guide to Gods, Heroes, Rituals, and Beliefs: A Guide to the Gods, Heroes, Rituals and Beliefs ( ! )
772
773- Medieval Iceland: Society, Sagas, and Power ( ! )
774
775- Prose Edda
776- Poetic Edda (Lee M. Hollander edition) ( ! )
777
778- Heimskringla : History of the Kings of Norway ( ! )
779- The Saga of the Volsungs: The Norse Epic of Sigurd the Dragon Slayer (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
780- The Vinland Sagas (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
781- Orkneyinga Saga: The History of the Earls of Orkney (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
782- The Saga of King Hrolf Kraki (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
783- The Saga of the People of Laxardal and Bolli Bollason's Tale (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
784- Njal's Saga (Classics of World Literature) ( ! )
785- Egil's Saga ( E.R. Eddison ) ( ! )
786- Grettir's Saga (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
787
788- Beowulf (Broadview Editions) ( ! )
789
790- Nibelungenlied ( németül ) ( ! )
791
792--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF VIKING MYTHOLOGY
793
794- Lady Gregory's Complete Irish Mythology ( ! )
795- T. W. Rolleston : Myths and Legends of the Celtic Race ( ! )
796- W. B. Yeats : Irish Folk and Fairy Tales ( ! )
797
798- Tales of the Elders of Ireland (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
799- The Tain : Translated from the Irish Epic Tain Bo Cuailnge ( Thomas Kinsella ) ( ! )
800
801- The Mabinogion (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
802
803- The History of the Kings of Britain: An Edition and Translation of the De gestis Britonum (Historia Regum Britanniae) (Arthurian Studies) ( ! )
804- Geoffrey of Monmouth's Life of Merlin: A New Verse Translation ( ! )
805
806- Merlin and the Grail: Joseph of Arimathea, Merlin, Perceval: The Trilogy of Arthurian Prose Romances attributed to Robert de Boron ( Arthurian Studies ) ( ! )
807
808- Ulrich Von Zatzikhoven : Lanzelet ( németül ) ( ! )
809- Wolfram von Eschenbach : Parzival ( németül ) ( ! )
810- Gottfried von Strassburg : Tristan ( németül ) ( ! )
811
812- Le Morte D'Arthur Volume One (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
813- Le Morte D'Arthur Volume Two (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
814- Le Morte Darthur (Norton Critical Editions) ( ! )
815
816- Sir Gawain and the Green Knight ( ! )
817
818- T.H. White : The Once and Future King
819
820--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF IRISH MYTHOLOGY + ARTHURIAN /LIT/
821
822- A History of the Ancient Near East, Ca. 3000-323 BC ( ! )
823
824- The Sumerians: Their History, Culture, and Character (Phoenix Books) ( ! )
825- Sumerian Mythology: A Study of Spiritual and Literary Achievement in the Third Millennium B.C. ( ! )
826
827- Early Mesopotamia: Society and Economy at the Dawn of History ( ! )
828- Ancient Iraq (Penguin History) ( Georges Roux ) ( ! )
829- Mesopotamian Mythology ( Oxford World's Classics )
830
831- Ugaritic Narrative Poetry ( ! )
832
833- The Hittites ( Oliver Gurney, 1990 Edition ) ( ! )
834- Hittite Myths ( ! )
835
836- Egyptian Mythology: A Guide to the Gods, Goddesses, and Traditions of Ancient Egypt by Geraldine Pinch ( ! )
837- The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt by Ian Shaw ( ! )
838
839- Writings from Ancient Egypt ( Penguin Classics ) ( ! )
840- The Tale of Sinuhe (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
841- Manetho (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
842
843- Zoroastrianism : An Introduction (I.B.Tauris Introductions to Religion) ( ! )
844
845----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF ANCIENT NEAR EAST
846
847- Biblia ( Károli Gáspár )
848
849- Biblia ( Szent István Társulat ) ( ! )
850
851- KJV Bible + Apocrypha ( ! )
852
853- KJV Study Bible ( ! )
854
855- Douay-Rheims Bible ( ! )
856
857- The Apostolic Fathers : Greek Texts and English Translations ( by Michael W. Holmes ) ( ! )
858
859- Sayings of the Desert Fathers : The Alphabetical Collection (Cistercian Studies) ( ! )
860
861- Early Christian Lives (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
862
863- Eusebius : Ecclesiastical History ( Books I-V ) ( Loeb Classical Library ) ( ! )
864- Eusebius : Ecclesiastical History ( Books VI-X ) ( Loeb Classical Library ) ( ! )
865
866- Tertullian and Minucius Felix : Octavius : Apology AND De Spectaculis (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
867
868- Saint Jerome : Select Letters (Loeb Classical Library) ( ! )
869
870--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO : START
871
872- The Jewish Study Bible ( ! )
873
874- The Talmud: A Selection (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
875
876- The Complete Dead Sea Scrolls in English (7th Edition) (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
877
878- Book of Enoch ( ??? ) ( ! )
879
880- The Kabbalistic Tradition: An Anthology of Jewish Mysticism (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
881
882--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF JEWISH TEXTS
883
884- Hermetica: The Greek Corpus Hermeticum and the Latin Asclepius in a New English Translation: With Notes and Introduction ( ! )
885
886- Nag-Hammadi Scriptures ( ! )
887- Pistis Sophia ( ! )
888
889----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF HERMETICISM AND GNOSTICISM
890
891- Manichaeism 101 ( ??? ) ( ! )
892
893- Mithras Cult 101 ( ??? ) ( ! )
894
895- Arianism 101 ( ??? ) ( ! )
896
897----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF MANICHAEISM 101, MITHRAS CULT 101, AND ARIANISM 101
898
899- Medieval Philosophy: An Historical and Philosophical Introduction ( ! )
900- Richard N. Bosley, Martin M. Tweedale : Basic Issues in Medieval Philosophy, Second Edition ( ! )
901
902- Saint Augustine ( 354 AD - 430 AD ) : The Confessions (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
903- Saint Augustine : The City of God against the Pagans (Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought) ( ! )
904- Saint Augustine : On Christian Teaching (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
905- Saint Augustine : Enchiridion on Faith, Hope, and Love (Augustine Series) ( ! )
906- Saint Augustine : Political Writings (Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought) ( ! )
907
908- Boethius ( c. 477 AD - 524 AD ) : The Consolation of Philosophy ( ! )
909
910- Anselm of Canterbury ( c. 1033 AD - 1109 AD ) : The Major Works (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
911
912- Peter Abelard ( 1079 AD - 1142 AD ) : Ethical Writings: His "Ethics" or "Know Yourself" and "Dialogue Between a Philosopher, a Jew and a Christian": His ... a Jew and a Christian" (Hackett Classics) ( ! )
913- The Letters of Abelard and Heloise (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
914
915- Thomas Aquinas ( 1225 AD - 1274 AD ) : A Beginner's Guide (Beginner's Guides) ( ! )
916- Thomas Aquinas : Summa Theologica ( ! )
917
918- Duns Scotus : Philosophical Writings: A Selection (Hackett Classics) ( ! )
919
920- William of Ockham : Philosophical Writings: A Selection (Hackett Classics) ( ! )
921
922- John Buridan (Great Medieval Thinkers) ( ! )
923
924-------------------------------- CHRISTIAN MYSTICISM
925
926- The Foundations of Mysticism : Origins to the Fifth Century (The Presence of God : A History of Western Christian Mysticism, Vol. 1) ( ! )
927- The Unknown God : Negative Theology in the Platonic Tradition : Plato to Eriugena ( ! )
928
929- Origen : On First Principles ( ! )
930
931- Theophany : The Neoplatonic Philosophy of Dionysius the Areopagite (Suny Series in Ancient Greek Philosophy) ( ! )
932- Pseudo-Dionysius : The Complete Works (Classics of Western Spirituality) ( ! )
933
934- The Philosophy of John Scottus Eriugena : A Study of Idealism in the Middle Ages ( ! )
935- Periphyseon : On The Division of Nature ( ! ) ( WARNING : Abridged, but no other version is available )
936
937- The Mystical Thought of Meister Eckhart ( c. 1260 AD - c. 1328 AD ) : The Man from Whom God Hid Nothing ( ! )
938- Wandering Joy : Meister Eckhart's Mystical Philosophy ( ! )
939- The Complete Mystical Works of Meister Eckhart ( ! )
940
941- John of the Cross : Collected Works ( ! )
942
943-------------------------------- CHRISTIAN MYSTICISM
944
945- Dante Alighieri ( c. 1265 AD - 1321 AD ) : Isteni színjáték ( Babits Mihály )
946
947- Dante Alighieri : The Divine Comedy ( Mandelbaum ) ( ! )
948
949- The Inferno ( Robert Hollander & Jean Hollander ) ( ! )
950- Purgatorio ( Robert Hollander & Jean Hollander ) ( ! )
951- Paradiso ( Robert Hollander & Jean Hollander ) ( ! )
952
953- Inferno, Vol. 1 ( Charles S. Singleton ) ( ! )
954- Inferno, Vol. 2 ( Charles S. Singleton ) ( ! )
955
956- Purgatorio, Vol. 1 ( Charles S. Singleton ) ( ! )
957- Purgatorio, Vol. 2 ( Charles S. Singleton ) ( ! )
958
959- Paradiso, Vol. 1 ( Charles S. Singleton ) ( ! )
960- Paradiso, Vol. 2 ( Charles S. Singleton ) ( ! )
961
962- La Commedia / Die Göttliche Komödie: Drei Bände in Kassette. Italienisch/Deutsch (Reclam Bibliothek) ( Hartmut Köhler ) ( ! )
963- Die Göttliche Komödie (Fischer Klassik) ( ! )
964
965- Erasmus ( 1466 - 1536 ) : Praise of Folly (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
966- Erasmus : The Education of a Christian Prince with the Panegyric for Archduke Philip of Austria (Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought) ( ! )
967
968- John Milton (1608 - 1674 ) : The Major Works (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
969
970- John Bunyan ( 1628 - 1688 ) : The Pilgrim's Progress ( ! )
971
972- Madách Imre : Az Ember Tragédiája ( ! )
973
974-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF CHRISTIAN LITERATURE
975
976- Anton Szandor LaVey : Satanic Bible ( ! )
977- Anton Szandor LaVey : Satanic Rituals: Companion to the "Satanic Bible" ( ! )
978- Anton Szandor LaVey : The Devil's Notebook ( ! )
979
980- Lemegeton: The Complete Books I-V: Ars Goetia, Ars Theurgia Goetia, Ars Paulina, Ars Almadel, Ars Notoria by Victor Shaw ( ! )
981
982-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF SATANIC TEXTS
983
984- The Qur'an (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
985
986- The Study Quran : A New Translation and Commentary ( ! )
987
988- An-Nawawi's Forty Hadith ( ! )
989
990- The Cambridge Companion to Arabic Philosophy (Cambridge Companions to Philosophy) ( ! )
991
992-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF MUSLIM TEXTS
993
994- Petrarch ( 1304 - 1374 ) : Triumphs ( ! )
995- Petrarch : Il Canzoniere ( ! )
996
997- Giovanni Boccaccio ( 1313 - 1375 ) : Decameron ( ! )
998
999- Geoffrey Chaucer ( c. 1343 - 1400 ) : The Canterbury Tales ( ! )
1000- Geoffrey Chaucer : Troilus and Criseyde (Norton Critical Editions) ( ! )
1001
1002- Luís de Camões ( c. 1524 - 1580 ) : The Lusiads ( ! )
1003
1004- Cervantes ( 1547 - 1616 ) : Don Quixote ( Grossman ) ( ! )
1005- Cervantes : Don Quijote (Norton Critical Editions) ( ! )
1006
1007- Torquato Tasso : Jerusalem Delivered ( ! )
1008
1009--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF DARK AGES LITERATURE
1010
1011 - Zrínyi Miklós : Szigeti veszedelem ( ! )
1012 - Zrínyi Miklós : Az török áfium ellen való orvosság ( ! )
1013
1014 - Arany János ( ! )
1015 - Petőfi Sándor ( ! )
1016
1017 - Vörösmarty Mihály : Zalán futása ( ! )
1018 - Vörösmarty Mihály : Csongor és tünde ( ! )
1019
1020 - Katona József : Bánk bán ( ! )
1021
1022 - Gárdonyi Géza : Egri csillagok ( ! )
1023 - Gárdonyi Géza : A láthatatlan ember ( ! )
1024 - Gárdonyi Géza : Isten rabjai ( ! )
1025
1026 - Jókai Mór : A kőszívű ember fiai ( ! )
1027 - Jókai Mór : Az arany ember ( ! )
1028 - Jókai Mór : Egy magyar nábob ( ! )
1029 - Jókai Mór : Szegény gazdagok ( ! )
1030
1031 - Mikszáth Kálmán : Beszterce ostroma ( ! )
1032 - Mikszáth Kálmán : Különös házasság ( ! )
1033 - Mikszáth Kálmán : Szent Péter esernyője ( ! )
1034 - Mikszáth Kálmán : A Noszty fiú esete Tóth Marival ( ! )
1035
1036 - Móricz Zsigmond : Légy jó mindhalálig ( ! )
1037 - Móricz Zsigmond : Úri muri ( ! )
1038
1039 - Babits Mihály ( ! )
1040
1041 - Móra Ferenc : Kincskereső Kisködmön ( ! )
1042 - Móra Ferenc : Aranykoporsó ( ! )
1043
1044 - Juhász Gyula ( ! )
1045
1046--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF MAGYAR IRODALOM 101
1047
1048- Edmund Spenser ( 1552 or 1553 - 1599 ) : The Faerie Queene (Longman Annotated English Poets) ( ! )
1049- Edmund Spenser : The Shorter Poems (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
1050
1051- Sir Philip Sidney ( 1554 - 1586 ) : An Apology for Poetry (or the Defence of Poesy) ( ! )
1052- Sir Philip Sidney : The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia (The Old Arcadia) (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
1053
1054- Christopher Marlowe ( 1564 - 1593 ) : The Complete Plays (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
1055- Christopher Marlowe : Doctor Faustus (Norton Critical Editions) ( ! )
1056
1057- William Shakespeare ( 1564 - 1616 ) : Most Important Works ( Arden versions ) ( ! )
1058
1059- Ben Jonson ( c. 1572 – 1637 ) : The Alchemist and Other Plays: Volpone, or The Fox. Epicene, or The Silent Woman. The Alchemist. Bartholomew Fair (Oxford World’s Classics) ( ! )
1060
1061- Robert Burton ( 1577–1640 ) : The Anatomy of Melancholy ( ! )
1062
1063- William Wycherley ( 1641 - 1716 ) : The Country Wife and Other Plays (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
1064
1065- Jonathan Swift ( 1667 - 1745 ) : Gulliver's Travels ( ! )
1066- Jonathan Swift : Major Works (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
1067
1068- William Congreve ( 1670 - 1729 ) : The Way of the World and Other Plays (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
1069
1070- Alexander Pope ( 1688 - 1744 ) : The Major Works (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
1071
1072- Samuel Johnson ( 1709 - 1784 ) : The Major Works (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
1073- James Boswell ( 1740 - 1795 ) : The Life of Samuel Johnson (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
1074
1075- Laurence Sterne ( 1713 - 1768 ) : The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman ( ! )
1076- Laurence Sterne : A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy ( ! )
1077- Laurence Sterne : A Political Romance ( ! )
1078
1079- Charles Dickens ( 1812 - 1870 ) : Oliver Twist ( ! )
1080- Charles Dickens : David Copperfield ( ! )
1081- Charles Dickens : A Tale of Two Cities ( ! )
1082- Charles Dickens : Great Expectations ( ! )
1083
1084- John Donne ( 1572 - 1631 ) : The Major Works (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
1085
1086- Francis Bacon ( 1561 - 1626 ) ( ??? )
1087
1088- Andrew Marvell ( 1621 - 1678 ) : The Complete Poems (Everyman's Library Classics) ( ! )
1089
1090- Thomas Browne ( 1605 - 1682 ) : Selected Writings (21st Century Oxford Authors) ( ! )
1091
1092- John Dryden ( 1631 - 1700 ) : Selected Poems (Longman Annotated English Poets) ( ! )
1093
1094- D. H. Lawrence ( 1885 - 1930 ) : Sons and Lovers ( ! )
1095- D. H. Lawrence : The Rainbow ( ! )
1096- D. H. Lawrence : Women in Love ( ! )
1097- D. H. Lawrence : John Thomas and Lady Jane ( ! )
1098- D. H. Lawrence : Lady Chatterley's Lover ( ! )
1099- D. H. Lawrence : Collected Stories (Everyman's Library Classics) ( ! )
1100
1101- Jane Austen ( 1775 - 1817 ) : Sense and Sensibility ( ! )
1102- Jane Austen : Pride and Prejudice ( ! )
1103- Jane Austen : Mansfield Park ( ! )
1104- Jane Austen : Emma ( ! )
1105
1106- Charlotte Bronte ( 1816 - 1855 ) : Jane Eyre ( ! )
1107
1108- Emily Bronte ( 1818 - 1848 ) : Wuthering Heights ( ! )
1109
1110- George Eliot ( 1819 - 1880 ) : Middlemarch ( ! )
1111
1112- William Wordsworth ( 1770 - 1850 ) - The Major Works : including The Prelude (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
1113- Samuel Taylor Coleridge ( 1772 - 1834 ) : The Major Works (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
1114
1115- George Byron ( 1788 - 1824 ) : The Major Works (Oxford World’s Classics) ( ! )
1116- The Complete Poetry and Prose of William Blake ( 1757 - 1827 ) ( ! )
1117- Robert Browning ( 1812 - 1889 ) : The Major Works (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
1118
1119- John Keats ( 1795 - 1821 ) : Major Works (Oxford World’s Classics) ( ! )
1120- Percy Bysshe Shelley ( 1792 - 1822 ) : The Major Works (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
1121- Alfred Tennyson ( 1809 - 1892 ) : The Major Works (Oxford World's Classics) ( ! )
1122
1123- William Makepeace Thackeray ( 1811 - 1863 ) : Vanity Fair ( ! )
1124
1125- Joseph Conrad ( 1857 - 1924 ) : Heart of Darkness ( ! )
1126
1127- W. B. Yeats ( 1865 - 1939 ) : The Major Works : including Poems, Plays, and Critical Prose (Oxford World’s Classics) ( ! )
1128
1129- Ezra Pound ( 1885 - 1972 ) ( ! )
1130
1131- T. S. Eliot ( 1888 - 1965 ) ( ! )
1132
1133--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF ANGLO-SAXON /LIT/ ==================================== !!!FRANCIA NYELV DEADLINE!!!
1134
1135- Chrétien de Troyes ( ! )
1136
1137- Song of Roland ( ! )
1138
1139- Ludovico Ariosto ( 1474 - 1533 ) : Orlando Furioso ( ! )
1140
1141- François Villon ( c. 1431 - c. 1463 ) ( ! )
1142
1143- Rabelais ( 1483 or 1494 - 1553 ) : Gargantua and Pantagruel ( ! )
1144
1145- François de La Rochefoucauld ( 1613 - 1680 ) ( ! )
1146
1147- Moliére ( 1622 - 1673 ) : Tartuffe ou L'Imposteur ( ! )
1148- Moliére : Le Misanthrope ou L'Atrabilaire amoureux ( ! )
1149- Moliére : L'Avare ( ! )
1150
1151- Pierre Corneille ( 1606 - 1684 ) ( ! )
1152
1153- Jean Racine ( 1639 - 1699 ) : Andromaque ( ! )
1154- Jean Racine : Phèdre ( ! )
1155- Jean Racine : Athalie ( ! )
1156
1157- Blaise Pascal ( 1623 - 1662 ) : Lettres provinciales ( ! )
1158- Blaise Pascal : Pensées ( ! )
1159
1160- La Divine Comédie ( ??? ) ( ! )
1161
1162- Denis Diderot ( 1713 - 1784 ) ( ! )
1163
1164- Victor Hugo ( 1802 - 1885 ) : Notre-Dame de Paris ( ! )
1165- Victor Hugo : Les Misérables ( ! )
1166- Victor Hugo : Les Contemplations ( ! )
1167- Victor Hugo : La Légende des siècles ( ! )
1168
1169- Honoré de Balzac ( 1799 - 1850 ) : Le Pére Goriot ( ! )
1170
1171- Alexandre Dumas ( 1802 - 1870 ) : Le Comte de Monte-Cristo ( ! )
1172- Alexandre Dumas : Les Trois Mousquetaires ( ! )
1173
1174- Stendhal : Le Rouge et le Noir ( ! )
1175- Stendhal : La Chartreuse de Parme ( ! )
1176
1177- Émile Zola : Thérèse Raquin ( ! )
1178- Émile Zola : Nana ( ! )
1179- Émile Zola : Germinal ( ! )
1180
1181- Gustave Flaubert : Madame Bovary ( ! )
1182- Gustave Flaubert : L'Éducation sentimentale ( ! )
1183- Gustave Flaubert : La Tentation de Saint Antoine ( ! )
1184
1185- Guy de Maupassant ( ! )
1186
1187- Charles Baudelaire ( ! )
1188
1189- Arthur Rimbaud ( ! )
1190
1191- Guillaume Apollinaire ( ! )
1192
1193- Descartes ( ! )
1194
1195- Malebranche : Treatise on Ethics ( ! )
1196- Malebranche : Treatise on Nature ( ! )
1197- Malebranche : The Search After Truth ( ! )
1198
1199- Montaigne : Essays ( ! )
1200
1201- Marcel Proust : À la recherche du temps perdu ( ! )
1202
1203- Comte de Lautréamont ( ! )
1204
1205- Paul Valéry ( ! )
1206
1207- Antonin Artaud ( ! )
1208
1209- Paul Verlaine ( ! )
1210
1211--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF FRENCH /LIT/ + LUDOVICO ARIOSTO
1212
1213- Spinoza : Complete Works ( ! )
1214
1215- Leibniz : Philosophical Essays ( ! )
1216- Leibniz : Monadology ( ! )
1217
1218- Voltaire : Candide ( ! )
1219
1220--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF RATIONALIST /LIT/
1221
1222- The Complete Works of Oscar Wilde: Stories, Plays, Poems & Essays ( ! )
1223
1224--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF OSCAR WILDE
1225
1226- Berkeley : Philosophical Writings ( ! )
1227
1228- Hume : A Treatise of Human Nature ( ! )
1229- Hume : Concerning Human Understanding ( ! )
1230- Hume : Concerning Natural Religion ( ! )
1231- Hume : Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary ( ! )
1232- Hume : Natural History of Religion ( ! )
1233- Hume : Principles of Morals ( ! )
1234
1235--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF EMPIRICIST /LIT/
1236
1237- Machiavelli: The Prince (Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought) ( ! )
1238- Machiavelli : Discourses on Livy ( ! )
1239- Machiavelli : Art of War (Chicago Press) ( ! )
1240- Machiavelli : Florentine Histories: (New translation) Introduction by Harvey Mansfield, Jr. ( ! )
1241
1242- Thomas Hobbes : Leviathan : Revised Student Edition (Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought) ( ! )
1243
1244- John Locke : Concerning Education ( ! )
1245- John Locke : Concerning Tolerance ( ! )
1246- John Locke : Two Treatises of Government ( ! )
1247- John Locke : Human Understanding ( ! )
1248- John Locke : Reasonability of Christianity ( ! )
1249
1250- Étienne Bonnot de Condillac ( ! )
1251
1252- Rousseau : A Discourse on the Origin of Inequality ( ! )
1253- Rousseau : The Social Contract ( ! )
1254- Rousseau : Confessions ( ! )
1255- Rousseau : Emile ( ! )
1256
1257- Montesquieu : The Spirit of the Laws ( ! )
1258- Montesquieu : Persian Letters ( ! )
1259
1260- Richard Price : Political Writings ( ! )
1261
1262- Edmund Burke : A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful ( ! )
1263- Edmund Burke : Pre-revolutionary Writings ( ! )
1264- Edmund Burke : Reflections on the Revolution ( ! )
1265
1266- Joseph de Maistre : Considerations on France ( ! )
1267- Joseph de Maistre : Essay on the Generative Principle of Political Constitutions and other Human Institutions ( ! )
1268
1269- Thomas Paine : Common Sense ( ! )
1270- Thomas Paine : Essay on Religion ( ! )
1271- Thomas Paine : Age of Reason ( ! )
1272- Thomas Paine : The Rights of Man ( ! )
1273
1274- Tocqueville : Democracy in America: In Two Volumes (Liberty Fund) ( ! )
1275
1276- Bentham : An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation (Dover Philosophical Classics) ( ! )
1277
1278- John Stuart Mill : The Utilitarianism (Hackett Classics)
1279- John Stuart Mill : 'On Liberty' and Other Writings ( ! )
1280
1281- Economics Evolving : A History of Economic Thought ( ! )
1282
1283- Adam Smith : The Theory of Moral Sentiments ( ! )
1284- Adam Smith : The Wealth of Nations ( ! )
1285
1286--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF POLITICAL TREATISES
1287
1288- German Philosophy 1760-1860: The Legacy of Idealism ( ! )
1289- German Idealism The Struggle against Subjectivism ( ! )
1290
1291- Gilles Deleuze : Kant's Critical Philosophy The Doctrine of the Faculties ( ! )
1292
1293- Kant ( 1724 - 1804 ) : Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics ( ! )
1294- Kant : Critique of Pure Reason ( ! )
1295- Kant : Critique of Practical Reason ( ! )
1296- Kant : Critique of Judgment ( ! )
1297- Kant : Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals ( ! )
1298- Kant : Universal Natural History ( ! )
1299- Kant : Religion within the Limits of Reason ( ! )
1300- Kant : Argument for God ( ! )
1301
1302- Johann Gottfried Herder ( ! )
1303
1304- Karl Leonhard Reinhold ( ! )
1305
1306- Jakob Friedrich Fries ( ! )
1307
1308- Fichte : Attempt at a Critique of All Revelation ( ! )
1309- Fichte : Foundation of Natural Right ( ! )
1310- Fichte : System of Ethics ( ! )
1311- Fichte : The Science of Knowing ( ! )
1312
1313- Friedrich Schlegel ( ! )
1314- August Wilhelm Schlegel ( ! )
1315
1316- Schelling : Ideas for a Philosophy of Nature ( ! )
1317- Schelling : System of Transcendental Idealism ( ! )
1318- Schelling : First Outline of a System of the Philosophy of Nature ( ! )
1319- Schelling : Philosophy and Religion ( ! )
1320- Schelling : Investigations into the Essence of Human Freedom ( ! )
1321- Schelling : The Abyss of Freedom ( ! )
1322- Schelling : The Ages of the World ( Fragment ) ( ! )
1323- Schelling : Philosophy of Art ( ! )
1324- Schelling : Berlin Lectures ( ! )
1325
1326- Boehme : Aurora ( ! )
1327- Boehme : The Supersensual Life ( ! )
1328- Boehme : The Forty Questions of the Soul ( ! )
1329- Boehme : Mysterium Magnum ( ! )
1330
1331- Hegel ( 1770 - 1831 ) : Faith and Knowledge ( ! )
1332- Hegel : Philosophy of Nature ( ! )
1333- Hegel : Philosophy of the Mind ( ! )
1334
1335- Hegel : Phenomenology of Spirit ( ! )
1336- Jean Hyppolite : Genesis and Structure of Hegel's "Phenomenology of Spirit" ( ! )
1337- Alexandre Kojéve : Introduction to the Reading of Hegel: Lectures on the Phenomenology of Spirit ( ! )
1338
1339- Hegel : Phenomenology of Mind ( ! )
1340- Hegel : Science of Logic ( ! )
1341- Hegel : Philosophy of the Right ( ! )
1342- Hegel : On Christianity ( ! )
1343- Hegel : History of Philosophy ( ! )
1344- Hegel : Philosophy of History ( ! )
1345- Hegel : Lectures on Fine Art ( ! )
1346
1347- Friedrich Schleiermacher ( 1768 - 1834 ) ( ! )
1348
1349- Schopenhauer ( 1788 - 1860 ) : Principle of Sufficient Reason ( ! )
1350- Schopenhauer : The World as Will and Representation ( ! )
1351- Schopenhauer : The Two Fundamental Problem with Ethics ( ! )
1352- Schopenhauer : Parerga and Paralipomena ( ! )
1353
1354- Max Stirner ( 1806 - 1856 ) : Der Einzige und sein Eigenthum ( ! )
1355
1356--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF IDEALISM /LIT/
1357
1358- Giacomo Leopardi ( ! )
1359
1360---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1361
1362- Friedrich Hölderlin ( 1770 - 1843 ) : Hyperion ( ! )
1363
1364- Friedrich Schiller ( 1759 - 1805 ) ( ! )
1365
1366- Gotthold Ephraim Lessing ( 1729 - 1781 ) ( ! )
1367
1368- Goethe ( 1749 - 1832 ) : The Sorrows of Young Werther ( ! )
1369- Goethe : Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship ( ! )
1370- Goethe : Elective Affinities ( ! )
1371- Goethe : Prometheus ( ! )
1372- Goethe : Italienische Reise ( ! )
1373- Goethe : Faust ( ! )
1374
1375- Novalis ( 1772 - 1801 ) ( ! )
1376
1377- Theodor Fontane ( 1819 - 1898 ) ( ! )
1378
1379- Rainer Maria Rilke ( 1875 - 1926 ) ( ! )
1380
1381- Heinrich Heine ( 1797 - 1856 ) : Buch der Lieder ( ! )
1382- Heinrich Heine : Reisebilder ( ! )
1383- Heinrich Heine : Germany. A Winter's Tale ( ! )
1384- Heinrich Heine : Atta Troll ( ! )
1385- Heinrich Heine : Romanzero ( ! )
1386
1387- Ernst Jünger : In Stahlgewittern ( ! )
1388- Ernst Jünger : Auf den Marmorklippen ( ! )
1389
1390- Erich Maria Remarque : Im Westen nichts Neues ( ! )
1391- Erich Maria Remarque : Zeit zu leben und Zeit zu sterben ( ! )
1392
1393- Philipp Mainländer ( ! )
1394
1395- Georg Trakl ( ! )
1396
1397--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF GERMAN /LIT/
1398
1399- Auguste Comte ( 1798 - 1857 ) ( ! )
1400
1401- Alexander Bain ( 1818 - 1903 ) ( ! )
1402
1403- Charles Sanders Peirce ( 1839 - 1914 ) ( ! )
1404
1405---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1406
1407- Friedrich Engels ( 1820 - 1895 ) : Condition of the Working Class in London ( ! )
1408
1409- Marx/Engels : The Communist Manifesto ( ! )
1410
1411- Karl Marx ( 1818 - 1883 ) : Lohnarbeit und Kapital ( ! )
1412- Karl Marx : Das Kapital, Vol. 1 ( ! )
1413- Karl Marx : Das Kapital, Vol. 2 ( ! )
1414- Karl Marx : Das Kapital, Vol. 3 ( ! )
1415
1416- Jean Hyppolite : Studies on Marx and Hegel ( ! )
1417
1418--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF MARXISM /LIT/
1419
1420- Søren Kierkegaard ( 1813 - 1855 ) : A Biography ( ! )
1421
1422- Kierkegaard : Either/Or ( ! )
1423- Kierkegaard : Fear and Trembling ( ! )
1424- Kierkegaard : Works of Love ( ! )
1425- Kierkegaard : The Sickness Unto Death ( ! )
1426- Kierkegaard : Purity of Heart ( ! )
1427- Kierkegaard : Concluding Unscientific Postscript ( ! )
1428
1429- Nietzsche ( 1844 - 1900 ) : Untimely Meditations ( ! )
1430- Nietzsche : Human, All Too Human: A Book for Free Spirits ( ! )
1431- Nietzsche : The Gay Science ( ! )
1432- Nietzsche : The Birth of Tragedy ( ! )
1433- Nietzsche : Beyond Good and Evil ( ! )
1434- Nietzsche : Genealogy of Morals ( ! )
1435- Nietzsche : Thus Spoke Zarathustra ( ! )
1436- Nietzsche : The Case of Wagner ( ! )
1437- Nietzsche : The Twilight of the Idols ( ! )
1438- Nietzsche : The Antichrist ( ! )
1439- Nietzsche : Ecce Homo ( ! )
1440- Nietzsche : Nietzsche Contra Wagner ( ! )
1441
1442- Freud ( 1856 - 1939 ) ( ! )
1443
1444- Carl Gustav Jung ( 1875 - 1961 ) ( ! )
1445
1446- The Hero with A Thousand Faces (The Collected Works of Joseph Campbell) ( ! )
1447
1448--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1449
1450- Herman Hesse : Demian ( ! )
1451- Herman Hesse : Siddhartha ( ! )
1452- Herman Hesse : Klingsors letzter Sommer ( ! )
1453- Herman Hesse : Der Steppenwolf ( ! )
1454- Herman Hesse : Narziß und Goldmund ( ! )
1455- Herman Hesse : Die Morgenlandfahrt ( ! )
1456- Herman Hesse : Das Glasperlenspiel ( ! )
1457
1458- Franz Kafka : Die Verwandlung ( ! )
1459- Franz Kafka : Der Process ( ! )
1460- Franz Kafka : Das Urteil ( ! )
1461- Franz Kafka : Das Schloss ( ! )
1462- Franz Kafka : Betrachtung ( ! )
1463- Franz Kafka : Ein Hungerkünstler ( ! )
1464- Franz Kafka : Briefe an Felice ( ! )
1465
1466--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF HERMAN HESSE/FRANZ KAFKA
1467
1468- Thomas Mann ( 1875 - 1955 ) : Buddenbrooks – Verfall einer Familie ( ! )
1469- Thomas Mann : Tonio Kröger ( ! )
1470- Thomas Mann : Der Tod in Venedig ( ! )
1471- Thomas Mann : Der Zauberberg ( ! )
1472- Thomas Mann : Mario und der Zauberer ( ! )
1473- Thomas Mann : Doctor Faustus ( ! )
1474
1475--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1476
1477- Henri Bergson ( 1859 - 1941 ) ( ! )
1478
1479- Alfred North Whitehead ( 1861 - 1947 ) ( ! )
1480
1481- Max Weber ( 1864 - 1920 ) ( ! )
1482
1483- Emile Durkheim ( 1858 - 1917 ) ( ! )
1484
1485--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1486
1487- Edmund Husserl ( 1859 - 1938 ) ( ! )
1488
1489- Heidegger ( 1889 - 1976 ) : Introduction to Metaphysics ( ! )
1490- Heidegger : Being and Time ( ! )
1491- Heidegger : Concerning Technology ( ! )
1492- Heidegger : On the Essence of Truth ( ! )
1493
1494--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1495
1496 - Jacques Lacan ( 1901 - 1981 ) ( ! )
1497
1498- André Breton ( 1896 - 1966 ) : Surrealist Manifesto ( ! )
1499
1500--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1501
1502- Ady Endre ( ! )
1503
1504- Kosztolányi Dezső ( ! )
1505
1506- Tóth Árpád ( ! )
1507
1508- Weöres Sándor ( ! )
1509
1510- Radnóti Miklós ( ! )
1511
1512- Örkény István ( ! )
1513
1514- Molnár Ferenc ( ! )
1515
1516- Wass Albert ( ! )
1517
1518-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF MAGYAR IRODALOM 202
1519
1520- Leo Strauss + Ernst Cassirer ( ! )
1521
1522- André Malraux : Les Conquérants ( ! )
1523- André Malraux : La Voie Royale ( ! )
1524- André Malraux : La condition humaine ( ! )
1525
1526- Karl Jaspers ( ! )
1527
1528- Hannah Arendt ( ! )
1529
1530- Louis-Ferdinand Céline : Journey to the End of the Night ( ! )
1531- Louis-Ferdinand Céline : Death on Credit ( ! )
1532- Louis-Ferdinand Céline : A Fine Mess ( ! )
1533
1534--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1535
1536- Jean Paul Sartre : Nausea ( ! )
1537- Jean Paul Sartre : Being and Nothingness ( ! )
1538
1539- Maurice Merleau-Ponty ( ! )
1540
1541- Lev Shestov ( ! )
1542
1543- Albert Camus : The Stranger ( ! )
1544
1545- Jean-Paul Sartre : Existentialism Is a Humanism ( ! )
1546
1547- Albert Camus : The Myth of Sisyphus ( ! )
1548- Albert Camus : The Plague ( ! )
1549- Albert Camus : The Rebel ( ! )
1550- Albert Camus : Resistance, Rebellion, and Death ( ! )
1551- Albert Camus : The Fall ( ! )
1552- Albert Camus : Exile and the Kingdom ( ! )
1553- Albert Camus : A Happy Death ( ! )
1554- Albert Camus : The First Man ( ! )
1555
1556- Samuel Beckett : Murphy (1938) ( ! )
1557- Samuel Beckett : Molloy (1951) ( ! )
1558- Samuel Beckett : Malone Dies (1951) ( ! )
1559- Samuel Beckett : The Unnamable (1953) ( ! )
1560- Samuel Beckett : Waiting for Godot (1953) ( ! )
1561- Samuel Beckett : Watt (1953) ( ! )
1562- Samuel Beckett : Endgame (1957) ( ! )
1563- Samuel Beckett : Krapp's Last Tape (1958) ( ! )
1564- Samuel Beckett : How It Is (1960) ( ! )
1565- Samuel Beckett : Happy Days (play) (1960) ( ! )
1566
1567--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF EXISTENTIALISM /LIT/ + THIS AND THAT
1568
1569- Edgar Allan Poe: Complete Tales and Poems (Fall River Classics) ( ! )
1570
1571- Nathaniel Hawthorne : Twice-Told Tales ( ! )
1572- Nathaniel Hawthorne : The Scarlet Letter ( ! )
1573- Nathaniel Hawthorne : The House of the Seven Gables ( ! )
1574
1575- Herman Melville : Moby Dick (Oxford World’s Classics) ( ! )
1576
1577- Mark Twain : The Adventures of Tom Sawyer ( ! )
1578- Mark Twain : The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn ( ! )
1579- Mark Twain : A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court ( ! )
1580
1581- Walt Whitman : Leaves of Grass (Oxford World’s Classics) ( ! )
1582
1583- Ralph Waldo Emerson ( ! )
1584
1585- Henry David Thoreau ( ! )
1586
1587- F. Scott Fitzgerald : The Great Gatsby (Everyman's Library Classics) ( ! )
1588
1589- J.D. Salinger : The Catcher in the Rye ( ! )
1590
1591- Jack London : Call of the Wild ( ! )
1592- Jack London : The Sea-Wolf ( ! )
1593- Jack London : White Fang ( ! )
1594
1595- William Faulkner : The Sound and the Fury ( ! )
1596- William Faulkner : As I Lay Dying ( ! )
1597- William Faulkner : Absalom, Absalom! ( ! )
1598
1599- John Steinbeck : Tortilla Flat ( ! )
1600- John Steinbeck : Cannery Row ( ! )
1601- John Steinbeck : The Red Pony ( ! )
1602- John Steinbeck : Of Mice and Men ( ! )
1603- John Steinbeck : The Grapes of Wrath ( ! )
1604- Jogn Steinbeck : East of Eden ( ! )
1605
1606- Wallace Stevens ( ! )
1607
1608- Thornton Wilder : The Bridge of San Luis Rey ( ! )
1609- Thornton Wilder : Our Town ( ! )
1610- Thornton Wilder : The Skin of Our Teeth ( ! )
1611
1612- Arthur Miller ( ! )
1613
1614- John Knowles : A Separate Peace ( ! )
1615- John Knowles : Peace Breaks Out ( ! )
1616
1617- Lee Harper : To Kill a Mockingbird ( ! )
1618
1619- William Golding : Lord of the Flies ( ! )
1620
1621- Jack Kerouac : On The Road ( !)
1622- Jack Kerouac : The Dharma Bums ( !)
1623- Jack Kerouac : Big Sur (Penguin Modern Classics) ( ! )
1624- Jack Kerouac : Satori in Paris (Penguin Modern Classics) ( ! )
1625
1626- Jack Black : You Can't Win ( ! )
1627
1628- William S. Burroughs : Naked Lunch ( !)
1629- William S. Burroughs : Junky ( !)
1630
1631- The Essential Ginsberg (Penguin Modern Classics) ( ! )
1632
1633- Anthony Burgess : A Clockwork Orange ( ! )
1634
1635- Brett Easton Ellis : American Psycho ( ! )
1636
1637- Tennessee Williams : A Streetcar Named Desire ( ! )
1638
1639- Arthur Miller : Death of a Salesman ( ! )
1640
1641- Samuel Beckett : Waiting for Godot (1953) ( ! )
1642
1643
1644--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF ESSENTIAL AMERICAN /LIT/
1645
1646- Vladimir Nabokov : Collected Stories (Penguin Modern Classics) ( ! )
1647- Vladimir Nabokov : Pale Fire ( ! )
1648
1649--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF NABOKOV
1650
1651- Nikolay Gogol : Gogol Collected Tales (Everyman's Library Classics) ( ! )
1652- Nikolay Gogol : Dead Souls (Everyman's Library Classics) ( ! )
1653
1654- Mikhail Lermontov : A Hero of Our Time ( ! )
1655
1656- Ivan Turgenev : A Sportsman's Sketches ( ! )
1657- Ivan Turgenev : Fathers and Sons ( ! )
1658- Ivan Turgenev : A Month in the Country ( ! )
1659
1660- Alexander Pushkin : Anyegin ( ! )
1661- Alexander Pushkin : Boris Godunov ( ! )
1662- Alexander Pushkin : The Captain's Daughter ( ! )
1663- Alexander Pushkin : Ruslan and Ludmila ( ! )
1664
1665- Anton Chekhov : The Collected Stories (Everyman's Library Classics) ( ! )
1666- Anton Chekhov : A Life in Letters (Penguin Classics) ( ! )
1667- Anton Chekhov : The Complete Short Novels (Everyman's Library Classics) ( ! )
1668
1669- Leo Tolstoy : Anna Karenina ( ! )
1670- Leo Tolstoy : War And Peace ( ! )
1671- Leo Tolstoy : The Death of Ivan Ilyich and Other Stories (Penguin ) ( ! )
1672- Leo Tolstoy : The Kingdom of God Is Within You ( ! )
1673- Leo Tolstoy : Resurrection ( ! )
1674
1675- Fyodor Dostoevsky : Notes from Underground ( ! )
1676- Fyodor Dostoevsky : Crime and Punishment ( ! )
1677- Fyodor Dostoevsky : The Idiot ( ! )
1678- Fyodor Dostoevsky : Demons ( ! )
1679- Fyodor Dostoevsky : The Brothers Karamazov ( ! )
1680
1681- Mikhail Bulgakov : The Master And Margarita (Everyman's Library Classics)
1682
1683--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF RUSSIAN /LIT/
1684
1685- Bertolt Brecht ( ! )
1686
1687--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF ???
1688
1689 - Jorge Luis Borges ( 1899 - 1986 ) : A Universal History of Infamy ( ! )
1690 - Jorge Luis Borges : Ficciones ( ! )
1691 - Jorge Luis Borges : El Aleph ( ! )
1692 - Jorge Luis Borges : Labyrinths ( ! )
1693 - Jorge Luis Borges : The Book of Sand ( ! )
1694
1695- Gabriel García Márquez ( 1927 - 2014 ) : One Hundred Years of Solitude ( ! )
1696- Gabriel García Márquez : The Autumn of the Patriarch ( ! )
1697- Gabriel García Márquez : Chronicle of a Death Foretold ( ! )
1698- Gabriel García Márquez : Love in the Time of Cholera ( ! )
1699
1700- Roberto Bolaño ( 1953 - 2003 ) ( ! )
1701
1702--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF LATIN-AMERICAN /LIT/
1703
1704- Frege : Sense and Reference ( ! )
1705- Frege : Function and Concept ( ! )
1706- Frege : Concept and Object ( ! )
1707
1708- Russell : An Inquiry Into Meaning and Truth ( ! )
1709- Russell : Authority and the Individual ( ! )
1710- Russell : The Conquest of Happiness ( ! )
1711- Russell : The Analysis of Mind ( ! )
1712
1713- Karl Popper ( ! )
1714
1715-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
1716
1717- Otto Weininger : Geschlecht und Charakter ( ! )
1718
1719-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
1720
1721- Wittgenstein : Tractacus ( ! )
1722- Wittgenstein : Philosophical Investigations ( ! )
1723
1724- Ayer : Freedom and Morality and other Essays ( ! )
1725- Ayer : Hume ( ! )
1726- Ayer : Kant ( ! )
1727- Ayer : Language, Truth, and Logic ( ! )
1728
1729--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF ANALYTIC PHILOSOPHY
1730
1731- Georges Bataille ( ! )
1732
1733- Maurice Blanchot ( ! )
1734
1735--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF ???
1736
1737- Emil Cioran ( ! )
1738
1739- Oswald Spengler ( ! )
1740
1741- Norman Mailer ( ! )
1742
1743- Charles Bukowski ( ! )
1744
1745- Henry James : The American ( ! )
1746- Henry James : The Turn of the Screw ( ! )
1747- Henry James : The Portrait of a Lady ( ! )
1748- Henry James : What Maisie Knew ( ! )
1749- Henry James : The Wings of the Dove ( ! )
1750- Henry James : Daisy Miller ( ! )
1751- Henry James : The Ambassadors ( ! )
1752- Henry James : Washington Square ( ! )
1753
1754--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF ???
1755
1756- Gary Gutting's French Philosophy in the Twentieth Century ( ! )
1757
1758- Jacques Derrida ( ! )
1759
1760- Michel Foucault ( ! )
1761
1762- Jean Baudrillard ( ! )
1763
1764- Félix Guattari + Gilles Deleuze ( ! )
1765
1766- Noam Chomsky ( ! )
1767
1768- Thomas Bernhard ( ! )
1769
1770--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF ???
1771
1772- Lukács György ( ! )
1773
1774- Theodor W. Adorno ( ! )
1775
1776- Jürgen Habermas ( ! )
1777
1778-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERMEZZO
1779
1780- Ayn Rand : The Fountainhead ( ! )
1781- Ayn Rand : Atlas Shrugged ( ! )
1782- Ayn Rand : The Virtue of Selfishness ( ! )
1783
1784- James Joyce : Dubliners ( ! )
1785- James Joyce : A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man ( ! )
1786- James Joyce : Ulysses ( ! )
1787- James Joyce : Finnegans Wake ( ! )
1788
1789- Ralph Ellison : The Invisible Man ( ! )
1790
1791- Robert Musil : Die Verwirrungen des Zöglings Törleß ( ! )
1792- Robert Musil : Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften ( ! )
1793
1794- Kurt Vonnegut : Cat's Cradle ( ! )
1795- Kurt Vonnegut : Mother Night ( ! )
1796- Kurt Vonnegut : God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater ( ! )
1797- Kurt Vonnegut : Breakfast of Champions ( ! )
1798- Kurt Vonnegut : Slaughterhouse-Five ( ! )
1799
1800- Joseph Heller : Catch-22 ( ! )
1801
1802- Cormac McCarthy : The Orchard Keeper ( ! )
1803- Cormac McCarthy : Outer Dark ( ! )
1804- Cormac McCarthy : Child of God ( ! )
1805- Cormac McCarthy : Suttree ( ! )
1806- Cormac McCarthy : Blood Meridian ( ! )
1807
1808- Truman Capote : Other Voices, Other Rooms ( ! )
1809- Truman Capote : In Cold Blood ( ! )
1810- Truman Capote : Breakfast at Tiffany's ( ! )
1811
1812- Cormac McCarthy : All the Pretty Horses ( ( ! )
1813- Cormac McCarthy : The Crossing ( ! )
1814- Cormac McCarthy : Cities of the Plain ( ! )
1815- Cormac McCarthy : The Road ( ! )
1816
1817- Thomas Pynchon : V. ( ! )
1818- Thomas Pynchon : The Crying of Lot 49 ( ! )
1819- Thomas Pynchon : Gravity's Rainbow ( ! )
1820- Thomas Pynchon : Vineland ( ! )
1821
1822- David Foster Wallace : Infinite Jest ( ! )
1823
1824- Thomas Pynchon : Mason & Dixon ( ! )
1825- Thomas Pynchon : Against the Day ( ! )
1826- Thomas Pynchon : Inherent Vice ( ! )
1827- Thomas Pynchon : Bleeding Edge ( ! )
1828
1829- Krasznahorkai László : Sátántangó ( ! )
1830- Krasznahorkai László : Az ellenállás melankóliája ( ! )
1831- Krasznahorkai László : Háború és háború ( ! )
1832
1833--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF 20TH CENTURY/POSTMODERN /LIT/
1834
1835- Christopher Lasch ( ! )
1836
1837--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1838
1839- Romance of the Three Kingdoms ( ! )
1840- Water Margin ( ! )
1841- Journey to the West ( ! )
1842- Dream of the Red Chamber ( ! )
1843
1844- The Plum in the Golden Vase ( ! )
1845- Unofficial History of the Scholars ( ! )
1846
1847--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF CHINESE /LIT/ ==================================== !!!JAPÁN NYELV DEADLINE!!!
1848
1849- The Tale of Genji ( ! )
1850
1851- Sei Shonagon : The Pillow Book ( ! )
1852
1853- Kagerō Nikki ( ! )
1854
1855- Sarashina Nikki ( ! )
1856
1857- The Tales of Ise ( ! )
1858
1859- The Tale of the Heike ( ! )
1860
1861- Kamo no Chōmei : Hōjōki ( ! )
1862
1863- Man'yōshū ( ! )
1864
1865- Yoshida Kenkō : Tsurezuregusa ( ! )
1866
1867- Ihara Saikaku : The Life of an Amorous Woman ( ! )
1868
1869- Yamamoto Tsunetomo : Hagakure ( ! )
1870
1871- Tōson Shimazaki : The Broken Commandment ( ! )
1872- Tōson Shimazaki : Family ( ! )
1873- Tōson Shimazaki : Before the Dawn ( ! )
1874
1875- Ryūnosuke Akutagawa : Short Stories ( ! )
1876
1877- Natsume Sōseki : I Am a Cat ( ! )
1878- Natsume Sōseki : Botchan ( ! )
1879- Natsume Sōseki : Kokoro ( ! )
1880- Natsume Sōseki : Kairo-kō ( ! )
1881- Natsume Sōseki : Kusamakura ( ! )
1882- Natsume Sōseki : The Heredity of Taste ( ! )
1883- Natsume Sōseki : Nowaki ( ! )
1884- Natsume Sōseki : Ten Nights of Dreams ( ! )
1885- Natsume Sōseki : Sanshirō ( ! )
1886- Natsume Sōseki : Sorekara ( ! )
1887- Natsume Sōseki : The Gate ( ! )
1888- Natsume Sōseki : The Wayfarer ( ! )
1889- Natsume Sōseki : My Individualism ( ! )
1890- Natsume Sōseki : Grass on the Wayside ( ! )
1891
1892- Miyazawa Kenji : A Night of the Milky Way Railway ( ! )
1893
1894- Naoya Shiga : A Dark Night's Passing ( ! )
1895
1896- Eiji Yoshikawa : Musashi ( ! )
1897
1898- Yasushi Inoue : The Counterfeiters and Other Stories ( ! )
1899
1900- Osamu Dazai : Flowers of Buffonery ( ! )
1901- Osamu Dazai : The Setting Sun ( ! )
1902- Osamu Dazai : No Longer Human ( ! )
1903
1904- Masuji Ibuse : Black Rain ( ! )
1905
1906- Katai Tayama : Inaka Kyoshi ( ! )
1907- Katai Tayama : Futon ( ! )
1908
1909- Yasunari Kawabata : The Dancing Girl of Izu ( ! )
1910- Yasunari Kawabata : Snow Country ( ! )
1911- Yasunari Kawabata : The Master of Go ( ! )
1912- Yasunari Kawabata : Sembazuru ( ! )
1913- Yasunari Kawabata : Yama no Oto ( ! )
1914- Yasunari Kawabata : The Lake ( ! )
1915- Yasunari Kawabata : The House of the Sleeping Beauties ( ! )
1916- Yasunari Kawabata : The Old Capital ( ! )
1917
1918- Junichiro Tanizaki : Naomi ( ! )
1919- Junichiro Tanizaki : Quicksand ( ! )
1920- Junichiro Tanizaki : Some Prefer Nettles ( ! )
1921- Junichiro Tanizaki : In Praise of Shadows ( ! )
1922- Junichiro Tanizaki : The Makioka Sisters ( ! )
1923- Junichiro Tanizaki : The Key ( ! )
1924
1925- Mori Ogai : The Wild Geese ( ! )
1926
1927- Yukio Mishima : Confessions of a Mask ( ! )
1928- Yukio Mishima : Thirst for Love ( ! )
1929- Yukio Mishima : Forbidden Colors ( ! )
1930- Yukio Mishima : The Sound of Waves ( ! )
1931- Yukio Mishima : The Temple of the Golden Pavilion ( ! )
1932- Yukio Mishima : Kyōko no Ie ( ! )
1933- Yukio Mishima : Sun and Steel ( ! )
1934- Yukio Mishima : After the Banquet ( ! )
1935- Yukio Mishima : The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea ( ! )
1936- Yukio Mishima : The School of Flesh ( ! )
1937- Yukio Mishima : Silk and Insight ( ! )
1938- Yukio Mishima : Acts of Worship ( ! )
1939- Yukio Mishima : Madame de Sade ( ! )
1940- Yukio Mishima : Patriotism ( ! )
1941- Yukio Mishima : Death in Midsummer and other stories ( ! )
1942- Yukio Mishima : Life for Sale ( ! )
1943- Yukio Mishima : The Sea of Fertility Tetralogy ( ! )
1944
1945- Kenzaburō Ōe : A Personal Matter ( ! )
1946- Kenzaburō Ōe : The Silent Cry ( ! )
1947- Kenzaburō Ōe : The Game of Contemporaneity ( ! )
1948
1949- Haruki Murakami : A Wild Sheep Chase ( ! )
1950- Haruki Murakami : Norwegian Wood ( ! )
1951- Haruki Murakami : The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle ( ! )
1952- Haruki Murakami : Kafka on the Shore ( ! )
1953
1954--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- END OF JAPANESE /LIT/
1955
1956Ah yes, the prose. The prooooooose. the PROOOOOOOSE. There's a reason why the pseuds on this website are always so willing to talk about "the prose" of a book when discussing its merits or flaws. Why attempt to analyze the merits and effects of the literary devices used to add to the development of characters, why attempt to understand the interplay of the perspectives of different characters and the emphasis this places on different themes, the spectrum of ironies used throughout the novel, the historical significance of the novel and the influence it has spawned in literary tradition or the influences seen throughout the work, the specific structure and literary underpinnings of the novel and the way it influences the tone, the author's relationship to the characters and the theme, the presentation of the novel itself to the audience and thus the relationship between reader and text --- why do any of this, when you could talk about "the prose?" You know that you have such a deep understanding of the book, don't you, when you talk about "the prose," the "musicality of it," the "sparseness." What a great artistic touch you have, don't you! Such a highly refined poetic sense! And you feel like such a true reader of literature when you are able to compare these styles: "I am partial to the lyricism of Joyce's prose, as well as the clean and scientific prose of Borges," you might say. What a deep understanding you show! Because the "prose" of a work is such an accessible topic, something that is felt immediately in the body and senses, a nice little sensation and flutter of the heart. Art obviously has nothing else to it, nothing other than the little sensations that I experience, because why should i attempt to understand it on a deeper level than this, when I have such a "refined" sense of the "prose?" Why even attempt to analyze the prose and the poetic and rhythmical underpinnings of it, when I could use a pretty little metaphor for it? It matters little that virtually every reader of literature has access to the music of the words and so my understanding is not quite so advanced as I would think, that form is something that goes hand in hand with theme, that I missed all the deep relationships between characters and between text and reader that existed in the work and that comprise a large part of the literary merit of the text, for my understanding of "the prose" shows such a mastery of language, a fine-tuned sense of the magical flow of the words! Having understood this work, I may as well move onto the next, the next bundle of pretty sensations to experience, the next bagful of fun linguistic treats!
1957
1958------------------------------
1959
1960He's a pariah, just like all other genre fiction "writers." If you ever publish a piece (and I do mean piece) of genre fiction, it's pretty much the kiss of death as far as real writers are concerned. You're consigned to the kiddie table from then on, and will forever dwell in that ghetto. Hacks simply aren't invited to the parties. What serious artiste would ever address an envelope to a name like King or Steel or Brown? Well, I do have one story. I once attended a cocktail party in the French Riviera hosted by a indomitable poetess. Several of the big name novelists were in attendance, including many of my fellow Oxford alumni. The mood was merry until a certain hack (in)famous for writing horse stories decided to gatecrash the villa. He was no doubt emboldened by a recent prize he won for (wait until you hear this) a post-apocalyptic survival horror novel. Sorry, just let me catch my breath. The moment this lost soul stepped under the veranda the entire party went dead silent and everyone turned to look at him with a single united look of disgust. The poetess, ever the angel, swooped in an engaged the poor fraud in his level of conversation. The talentless nobody was already sopping drunk, of course. No doubt he'd needed courage to even approach the door, and so decided to "party rock" from a flask in his tiny rundown rental car outside. She graciously asked him if he was working on a new horse novel, and he replied (and I'll remember these words until the day I die), "No, a crime screenplay." The entire villa erupted in laughter and the sad little nothing was so mortified he simply slunk away. Only then did we return to our shimmering conversations about the craft. Who do these people think they are, really?
1961
1962---------------------
1963
1964Which authors were inspired by translations? Most educated writers would know at least 5 languages, especially european ones. A french writer would definitely know French, German, English, Greek and Latin. They'd also learn a southern/iberian european language like Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, if they were interested on these cultures. This went well into the 20th century until our standards for education became much more focused on the natural sciences and work, so the extensive study of languages and the liberal arts was dropped.
1965
1966----------------------------------------
1967
1968( Gravity's Rainbow )
1969
1970There’s a whole interweaving or themes, symbols, and imagery which ties into the plot in a complex way (from one point of view) but also in a very simple, straight-in-your-face way. This sounds paradoxical. The thing about Pynchon is that on a sentence-to-sentence, scene-to-scene level, he can be very dense. However, he’s pretty in-your-face about his themes and symbols if you can understand the story. What he’s doing is combining the ideas of sadomasochism, duality, entropy, and Pavlovian conditioning in a way such that it runs throughout the whole story and is a commentary on the modern human condition, on pollution, and on war. In Pavlovian conditioning, as Pynchon points out, there’s an “ultra-paradoxical phase” where a negative stimulus can result in a positive response and vice versus. The union of opposites, basically. This is related explicitly by Pynchon to occult traditions (the Kabbalistic Tree of Life of Jewish mysticism, for instance, where there are two pillars representing Mercy and Severity; yin and yang; the Masonic checkerboard of black and white representing the union of opposites) where opposites are combined. Cf. also Jung’s idea of the union of opposites as a psychological archetype running through the world’s religious and mystical systems. Pynchon also relates this to transvestism (two genders combined) and sadomasochism (pain and pleasure combined). One poster a long time ago also made a great post pointing out how Pynchon constantly and subtly juxtaposes the colors black and white throughout the book.
1971
1972Entropy, the state of randomness, lack of order. This is crucial to the book. The book sort of leads you on with a bunch of vignettes and subplots and conspiracy theories, making you think they’ll be tied together in the end. Instead, in Part 4, everything sort of disintegrates, becomes a surrealistic haze. This is almost, if not outright, metafictional: it could represent the rocket 00000 exploding at the end, causing a state of chaos in its explosion represented by the fragmented state of the end of the book. This ties in to war: humans willingly destroying themselves (Thanatos, Freudian death drive, sadomasochism again), increasing entropy. This is a brief overview, there’s more complicated analyses possible, but overall Pynchon’s symbolism and themes are pretty clear. It’s understanding what literally happens in the book that’s the issue at times. Once you get that, the symbolism is clear.
1973
1974-------------------------------------------------------------
1975
1976>Japanese
1977
1978Kawabata is the heavyweight champion of Japanese literature. His magnum opus is the "Master of Go", but I'd go with "The Lake" or "Snow Country". Those are moodier. But you should read all of them.
1979
1980Soseki is the father of modern Japanese literature. "Botchan" hit too close to home, so I didn't like it all that much, it was infuriating to read, but "The Gate" is excellent though. It also portrays the modernising Japanese society, which makes it all the more interesting.
1981
1982Akutagawa wrote pretty good short stories. Just grab a collection and read it. They are full of soul. I'm especially fond of his story "Mori Sensei", which talks about an elderly teacher, thoroughly devoted to his craft. His novel "Kapppa" is "okay". It's a critique of the contemporary elite with some socialist undertones, but it's nowhere near as good as the short stories.
1983
1984Dazai's No Longer Human is one of the best books ever written, and you should read it. It's absolutely lovely.
1985
1986Mishima didn't really strike me as a literary genius when I've read him, but you might find it otherwise. (Though I still have a novel of his waiting to be read, so it's not like I don't want to "redeem myself".) His plays are pretty good. (I liked "My friend, Hitler". It's an interesting drama.)
1987
1988Ryu Murakami is contemporary and edgy. "In the Miso Soup" had me gagging at parts. Haven't read much else by him.
1989
1990Toshiki Okada's "The end of the moment we had" is also contemporary, it's short, and really good. I liked it a lot, and it's refreshing to read something light and modern.
1991
1992
1993>Chinese
1994
1995Now the problem with this one is that Chinese literature (classic Chinese literature) feels like a gigantic circlejerk at times, with often namedropping/quoting past emperors, poets, generals or philosophers. The more you read, the more rewarding it becomes.
1996
1997Pu Song-ling: "Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio" - It's a bunch of ghost stories. Who wouldn't want to read stories about promising young scholars fucking pretty foxgirls and ghosts before passing their imperial exams with flying colours? It's quintessentially Chinese.
1998
1999Lao She wrote some pretty good short stories. He's one of the better modern writers.
2000
2001Lu Xun is the father of modern Chinese literature. He also wrote a lot of short stories, and a novel, "The real story of Ah-Q", which was OK, but didn't really grab me. He wrote a lot of good essays on Chinese literature and contemporary subject though.
2002
2003Gao Xingjian's "Soul Mountain" has a mountain of souls poured into it. It feels magical, and you have to experience it. Haven't had the chance to read any of his dramas yet.
2004
2005Wang Meng was one of the major players in the PRC, before he was sent off for "reeducation" into Xingjian. He has some nice short stories.
2006
2007Mo Yan is the current golden egg laying hen of the PRC literary scene. "The Republic of Wine" is a really good post-modern novel that'll sink in a few days after finishing it. It's a good read.
2008
2009Tashi Dawa is a halfling Tibetan author who writes gay spiritualist intercultural shit. Avoid this retard.
2010
2011Yuan dramas are really interesting. "Circle of Chalk" is the most famous and influental in the West.
2012
2013Also try getting acquainted with Du Fu and Li Bai. Just so you know who they are when they are referenced.
2014
2015I've read parts of Wu Jingzi's "The Scholars", and that's a good novel too, but it's more like a collection of novellas. It's a parody of the era's intellectual elite, so the tone is cynical and ironic.
2016
2017Also keep in mind that Chinese and Japanese literature differ a lot. Japanese literature feels like visiting a "magical dreamland". Meanwhile Chinese literature is a lot more grey and cruel. They write some cruel as Hell stuff. You should still read Chinese fiction, but don't expect it to be Murakami.
2018
2019-----------------------------------------------------------------
2020
2021 ( Brave New World )
2022
2023I don’t really get you finding it boring. It really addresses a lot of important issues.
2024
2025So after thinking a little bit i asked myself, "when taken to their logical conclusion, what values of our current society tend towards creating the one depicted in brave new world? or conversely what values do we hold that counter it ever occurring?"
2026
2027okay well, what values does brave new world have?
2028>completely sexual freedom. “everyone belongs to everyone” so have sex with everyone you want.
2029>families units are bad. they create unstable societies. thus marriage and monogamy are illegal.
2030>having children is disgusting and painful. and parenting is like treating children as objects to be owned. so pregnancy is illegal.
2031>all women must constantly use birth control so as to never get pregnant. abortions are enforced
2032>there are no particular gender roles for men and women, we are all the same
2033>all children that are born are test tube creations. perfected with genetic modification.
2034>any negative feelings are immediately blocked with drugs (soma)
2035>everything is society is centrally planned by a global government
2036>disregarding of the past. History is barbaric and we needn’t learn about it
2037>no religion, instead they worship a political figure of sorts (Ford)
2038
2039do i even really need to draw comparisons with the sort of values that are emerging in today’s culture?
2040>the LGBTQ movement and sexual openness
2041>the rise of cultural marxism and the systematic dissolving of the family unit
2042>feminism and how women should value their careers over having a family and being mothers
2043>the rise of abortion rates and the use of the pill has become so commonplace that it’s odd when women /don’t/ take it
2044>gender is no longer equal to sex. It’s a social construct and a choice
2045>CRISPR and the introduction of real genetic modification. “Designer babies”
2046>the increase of recreational drug use. Legalisation of marijuana. Opioid addiction rates. Overprescription of antidepressants
2047>the (((globalist))) agenda. Desire for world government
2048>the postmodernist movement
2049>the drop in organised religion and increase in agnosticism. Turning toward politics as a sort of crippled-religion
2050
2051These are just a few examples. I could go on and on about how the things taking place in this book are, and have been playing out over nearly the last century and we’re getting closer and closer to it with disastrous consequences. I see no angle in which this is more humane or more interesting. It’s disgusting and sad.
2052
2053-----------------------------------------------------------------
2054
2055 ( Houllebecq : Whatever )
2056
2057It's influenced by The Stranger, with a clear nod in the form of the beach scene where Tisserand almost stabs the black. Unlike Sartre, whose novella doesn't really provide a clear reason why Mersault shoots the Arab, Houellebecq's work makes it obvious.
2058
2059His use of symbolism is what makes the book so unique in its atmosphere and internal logic. In 30,000 words he doesn't waste much time in providing superfluous description, dialogue etc - instead he focuses only on that which has overall relevance. It is a closed system.
2060
2061Think about the role cars play in the story. First, the narrator admits he has "lost his car" early on in the book, shortly after watching with indifference as his female co-worker strips in front of him at the party. He acknowledges that losing one's car is symptomatic of something more worrying, and refuses to tell his co-workers. What he has really lost here is his drive or libido. He goes to a party as a single man, feels nothing as various women undress and cavort around him in hollow displays of sexuality, and then starts his decline (most obvious at the novel's end) as he realizes he has lost his car / drive. Why have a car anyway? the narrator asks. It's a hassle to maintain, etc - Houellebecq's love of Schopenhauer is no coincidence.
2062
2063In another scene the protagonist is speaking to his female co-worker, who hates living in a city. The narrator briefly describes another co-worker nearby, a guy in a hawaii shirt who talks loudly about a mutual friend (male) who went out driving recklessly with some girl he was having sex with and ended up crashing the car, killing her. Nothing more is said, and the narrative continues. But within a space of ~75 words we are again confronted by the notion that sexual liberation is embedded in the culture (casual dating), that formality is on the decline (hawaiian shirt, Americanized dialogue), and introduced again to the symbol of the car. This story foreshadows the sinister reality of an unbridled libido witnessed in Atomised, but is also a reminder that with no love involved there is no duty of care, and so the death is not even that tragic as neither party really felt anything for each other beyond lust.
2064
2065
2066And then finally we learn that Tisserand, driving back to Paris alone after coming to terms with the fact he is a romantic loser, undesired and fated to loneliness, ends up dying with his car being the cause of death. He has not lot his car, as has the narrator; and cannot therefore detach himself from romantic and sexual longing. Nor are any passengers ever present in his car, a car powerful enough to shield him should he crash; as with the Lothario who presumably is on to his next girl. Tisserand's drive eventually becomes too much to handle, and yet exists within a body too ugly for it to find a girl to want to go joyriding with it. He dies angry and alone, full of frustration and bitterness, losing control (perhaps voluntarily) of his drive and crashing on the highway.
2067
2068
2069
2070
2071
2072So woke about what?
2073
2074Every character in the story finds themselves within the closed system Houellebecq insists there is no escape from. It is why things are so bleak, and why the protagonist's final act is to cycle aimlessly into the wilderness; it's an attempted escape from an ideological system which makes the novella a prison of sorts.
2075
2076The woman he works with, who leaves the city every weekend to visit her distant rural hometown, and who he imagines crying to herself alone every morning, is locked in the system which has denied her the traditional life of her female ancestors. The escape she sees is to worker harder and harder and burn herself out by spending hours every weekend briefly escaping Paris.
2077
2078The priest friend of the narrator attempts to escape the irreligious, crime-ridden, isolated life of 21st century Paris by having sex with some girl who seduces him for a joke, but finds himself disappointed by what is revealed again to be a failed escape attempt.
2079
2080Tisserand attempts to escape inceldom by hitting on various women, all of whom reject him; another failed attempt of his own ideological prison cell. His final escape can only come in the form of suicide. For Tisserand, as the narrator makes clear in the nightclub, there is no escape now. The domain of the struggle has extended to every aspect of life, and in this domain there is no room for losers like Tisserand.
2081
2082The narrator is more detached, his prison cell less more spacious yet equally as oppressive. As he points out, a monkey who knows he is locked in a cage will smash his head on the bars in protest, yet a monkey in a cage with a deep hole in it will sit quietly by that hole knowing it can kill itself at any point. The narrator spends the entire story sitting by this hole, looking around only to remark on how airtight the cell appears to be. Computers disgust him, advertising disgusts him, immigration disgusts him, psychoanalysis disgusts him, modern dating disgusts him, economic ambition disgusts him, atomizing ideologies disgust him, naive nostalgic people disgust him, etc. Yet he doesn't want to die, and remembers himself as a child when he was unaware of the prison being built around him. Finally he makes the best attempt he can to escape, but how that ends we don't know, though likely he just rots away like Bartleby in some French forest alone like some religious ascetic.
2083
2084The priest lives in an Arab-filled council block, and finds that almost nobody in the rough area of Paris cares about Christianity, despite his efforts. He now gets drunk alone watching TV. The last French Christian in the area was an elderly lady from Breton, who we learn has been viciously attacked and dies soon after. His first appearance, at the start of the novel, is used to propose the theory that a health society is one in which the appetite to live is great but where virtue is emphasized in humility and repression. We can assume that at this point in the novel he himself has yet to give in to what he describes as the exhaustion defining the modern world. He argues that Jesus is the solution, and advises the narrator to find God.
2085
2086However, at the novel's end he himself is isolated, exhausted, purposeless, apathetic just as the narrator was when they meet earlier on in the story. The domain of the struggle has extended to his own life, and with nobody willing to be converted and his final parishioner murdered by some savage locals, he sees no way to escape the malaise he perceives in his friend (the narrator) but to do what Tisserand does and channel his drive into physical temptation. He fucks a girl who then tells him she doesn't care about him and just enjoys fucking a lot of guys. Now he is truly locked inside Houllebecq's ideological prison. He cannot even pretend that his surroundings are limited only by his religious convictions, but sees the prison walls for what they are. He only has sex, and gives up on his Christian beliefs, when he realizes they are now only condemning him to loneliness. His desire to bond with others then, and escape the isolation he warns the narrator against, comes in the form of an attempted romance which leaves him burned by a callous cock jockey.
2087
2088
2089( Michel Houllebecq : Submission )
2090
2091I fully agree. Submission is an excellent satire about the increasingly decandent and apathetic West, notably its intellectuals. Houellebecq himself remarked that we can make arrangemnents (with Islam), but that the feminists will not be able too. Because feminism is demographically doomed we will have to deal with the increasing Islamization of Western society. Houellebecq does a thorough job of explaining that such a situation won't be as horrible as it may seem.
2092
2093(On the Identitarians and islam)
2094
2095[B]ut the whole article was one long appeal to his old comrades, the traditional nativists. It was a passionate plea. He called it tragic that their irrational hostility to Islam should blind them to the obvious: on every question that really mattered, the nativists and the Muslims were in perfect agreement.
2096
2097When it came to rejecting atheism and humanism, or the necessary submission of women, or the return of patriarchy, they were fighting exactly the same fight. And today this fight, to establish a new organic phase of civilisation, could no longer be waged in the name of Christianity.
2098
2099Islam, its sister faith, was newer, simpler and more true (why had Guénon, for example, converted to Islam? he was above all a man of science, and he had chosen Islam on scientific grounds, both for its conceptual economy and to avoid certain marginal, irrational doctrines such as the real presence of Christ in the eucharist), which is why Islam had taken up the torch.
2100
2101Thanks to the simpering seductions and the lewd enticements of the progressives, the Church had lost its ability to oppose moral decadence, to renounce homosexual marriage, abortion rights and women in the workplace. he facts were plain: Europe had reached a point of such putrid decomposition that it could no longer save itself, any more than fifth-century Rome could have done.
2102
2103This wave of new immigrants, with their traditional culture – of natural hierarchies, the submission of women and respect for elders – offered a historic opportunity for the moral and familial rearmament of Europe. These immigrants held out the hope of a new golden age for the old continent. Some were Christian; but there was no denying that the vast majority were Muslim.
2104
2105----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2106
2107> Frankfurt School
2108
2109- They hide behind dense and technical vocabulary, so its hard to know if there are any ideas in there, or if they are just spewing trash.
2110- They pretend they are allies of the common man, but are extremely out of touch elitists.
2111- Its ignorant of other fields. Its not rigorous like philosophy and it doesn't consider contributions from economists or sociologists. Its just weak armchair reasoning.
2112- Its not constructive. Instead of searching for truth, or questioning the limits of knowledge, it just tears things down.
2113
2114----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2115
2116 ( Neoliberalism )
2117
2118I don't mind someone having an extreme ideology or an open political slant, I think what's so offensive about neoliberal shit is that it's pablum, it's ubiquitous and status quo, and it has that finger-wagging "You'd better agree with this! You agree with this, right? You'd better! You're a good person, aren't you? Don't you want to be accepted by the community?" puritan streak in it.
2119
2120If some guy came up to me and said "DISSOLVE ALL BORDERS, THE WORLD MUST DESCEND INTO ONE UNIVERSAL REICHIAN ORGY, LET THE ORGONS FLOW AND CREATE THE UNIVERSAL WORLD BABY SO THAT THERE MAY BE PEACE IN THE MIDDLE EAST" I'd be like wow alright, that's a pretty extreme viewpoint but at least you're pretty open about it. It's when they do that carping, effeminate enforcement of completely status quo opinions that I get creeped out. What kind of person enthusiastically takes up the cause of the status quo INSOFAR AS it's the status quo? Women apparently.
2121
2122I don't blame women, I blame a society that lets their worst behaviors run amok. Women are herdthinking faggots who unconsciously enjoy enforcing social cohesion because it raises their status in the tribe. That's fine if we're talking about a knitting circle, and the dykes and other women who don't fit in are allowed to leave the circle. I don't want to live in Knitting Circle One (Formerly "Western Civilization").
2123
2124women have always been like this, it's their role in society. They virtue signal and act like volunteer stasi in every culture, although in the West it is quite bad in many ways because the women who suffer the most from this vice are rewarded and systematically uplifted. As long as they are doing what the jewish bourgeoisie wants, they will be rewarded
2125
2126For me it's the intellectual dishonesty. Lying about how they know what they're talking about because they have statistics (which don't prove what they're pretending they do). They're not really arguing that it's inconceivable there's any reason but discrimination that fewer women/minorities (asians don't count) are in stem. They're just declaring that while daring anyone to point out politically incorrect alternative reasons.
2127
2128--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2129
2130Plotinus couldn't hold a candle to a one of Shankara's farts. The fact that he would try to construct some metaphysical system on the talks of some random guy who never even clearly stated during his life whether he agreed with it - LMAO what a joke, meanwhile my nigga Shankara revealed the supreme truth of the Aryan scriptures. Shankara is also way more lucid and logical than Plotinus, he completely btfos like 5 or 6 different schools of Hindu philosophy along with Jains and Buddhists all at the same time without breaking a sweat while all Plotinus does is whine and bitch and some gnostics etc. To compare the value of them let's just see what happened to them, Neoplatonism got absorbed into the opposing doctrine of Christianity and finally was cucked out of existence by Christian authorities while Shankara is revered accross India and most Indian Philosophy after him is just a modification of his ideas.
2131
2132-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2133
213424 yo American woman here. After I graduated from Wellesley I needed to find myself, and decided to forgo yoga training and travel the world and write about my experiences and the impact they have on my life. (I haven't been outside the country since I volunteered in Costa Rica for a week in during the summer in High School, where I learned how hard some people have it).
2135
2136I've been all over Europe (s/o to Truow!) and I'm currently in Barcelona, where I love the incredible architecture, the breathtaking art history, the luscious music, the exquisite tapas, the vibrant nightlife and the chance to explore my sexuality with the interesting people I meet. The freedom is like nothing I've experienced before. Everybody should experience this, and I think there's no doubt that travel makes you a richer person.
2137
2138I recently got this tattoo in cool parlor after clubbing in Kreuzberg (in Berlin) (this is me on a beach in Morocco), which I think defines the kind of character I want to be. It reminds me never to take things for granted because we all face challenges, and no matter how hard life can seem, you need to stay grounded.
2139
2140---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2141
2142Western 'individualism' isn't individualism. It's satisfying the cultural concept of the aesthetic and sentiment of individuality and often rebellion, which is not only deeprooted in the core culture but is constantly used and therefore conditioned by all kinds of media (for hundreds of years but it's particularly aggressive and shallow today). Which means individualism as practised by a Westerner is always suspect and probably hollow whereas the individualism of another is much more sincere (which is especially clear if you look at the contents of this individualism, the Westerner is all about sentimentality and social signals, the other is simply unique and thoughful).
2143
2144LGBT is an invention of capitalism to promote atomised rootless cogs. There's nothing particular about it though, all social movements and subculture are exactly the same in this. Identity is a commodity, one that happens to break everyone down into neat little servile consumers. Also one that happens to be too shallow to satisfy the human and so they must overcompensate as they decay into mental illness. This identitymongering simply doesn't provide a comprehensive identity.
2145
2146lgbt is the brainchild of leftist/liberal academic circles and spread by media puppets spawned by those mentioned circles. the notion that there was a bunch of "capitalists" that came up with lgbt as a brand to put on sale is flat out retarded.
2147
2148Leftist/liberal academic circles and media are the frontmen of capitalism and a product in themselves.
2149
2150
2151>Do you think that all there is to a gay person is their sexuality?
2152
2153No, that's all there is to their 'gay' identity though.
2154LGBT is an invention, the fact that historical sexuality doesn't fit into your categories notwithstanding. It is a social and political movement propped up by capitalism, and its root conception can be considered to be an indirect invention of it. Not only it is used by capitalism, but the logic of it is destructive and supportive of the capitalist world, and broadly the materialist world. Which is the root of all our problems. They're not forced into groups, they are puppets and pathetic identitymongerers who on the level of racial nationalists. I am bisexual, or maybe something else, I don't care for labels or subcultures. Identity is not something you invent and flit about through. Making it as such is just an excuse to sell shit basically.
2155
2156>It's a civil rights movement. In many places gays are discriminated against culturally. In a lot of places they're not even allowed to marry. Why the fuck do you think they need a movement?
2157
2158Think of it this way, you're upheaving one's culture and civilisation just because you, like most people actually, aren't strictly heterosexual. A place where gays get dropped off buildings does so because it is within their values and religion to be opposed to them when they don't mostly adhere to those values and religion (no one hunts them down, there's plenty of room to do what you want privately). What you're saying is they should destroy their values and religion just so a tiny minority can have open sex with eachother (they are capable of having sex now, just not congregating for casual sex -- casual sex for everyone is bad anyway). Barring those places, most of the world offers some kind of union between people that isn't restricted by sexes of the parties. Marriage, particularly in Abrahamic religions and their resultant societies but actually for all cultures for reasons of human nature and reproduction, is a union of two linked yet disparate parts: man and woman. I many cases this union symbolises a complete person coming into being, men and women just being halves that need come together. You are just ignorant and narrowminded, and incapable of thinking outside of such shallow terms as who you're attracted to. In the end, this is a violent ideology that aims to bring Western imperialism and capitalism to each little facet of life, and destroy all semblance of tradition and anything that isn't based in it, based in making profit.
2159
2160Also on heterosexuality, most peoples acknowledged and practised other 'sexualities', they just weren't dumb and considered them secondary because they don't provide the two halves to give form to society and create life.
2161
2162Exactly this. If who you are is intimately tied up with what makes you orgasm, you're farther gone than you'll perhaps ever know.
2163
2164develop an identity that isn't basically your contingent sexual preferences. we shouldn't judge people for properties they can't control... so we should celebrate them instead? I can't control my urge to rape and mutilate, I was born this way, bigot. Where are my rights?
2165
2166>What can gay people do to gain acceptance if they can't form unions and cultural movements?
2167Be gay in private. What happened to "what's going on behind someone else's closed doors is none of your business"? It moved from behind closed doors to literally all over the place. Television, school books, marriage altars, corporate life, etc..
2168
2169
2170Yes. The root cancer is unchecked liberalism and individualism is one of that trend's infiltrations. At a lesser degree, individualism was an advantage for western populations (more innovation, wider range of economic activity), but we blew right past the point of diminishing returns and we're well into the negative returns you describe.
2171
2172
2173dog just get a fucking personality beyond what triggers the release of seminal fluid from your cowper's gland, fuck's sakes. even GOTTA GET DAT PUSSY MAAAANE faggots are insufferable, you're all insufferable
2174
2175---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2176
2177 ( Postmodernism )
2178
2179much of what is said about "postmodernism" actually refers to what American literary theorists of the 1960s and 1970s got from their hasty reading of middling translations of French philosophers. Most French philosophers lumped into "postmodernism" did not use the term, and most are clearly hostile to many aspects of postmodernism. furthermore, the political angle of postmodernism is complicated as authors like Deleuze and Foucault are obviously left of the French communist party, but authors like Derrida or Lacan are generally apolitical; their appropriation by American New Leftists hungry for culture war is a farce to say the least. most of these thinkers wrote in a difficult-to-approach style that was by no means unprecedented: Nietzsche, Heidegger, Bataille, Barthes and many others paved the way.
2180
2181Your entire dislike of Post Modernism, is based on intentionally misrepresented ideas which people who have a vested interest in misrepresenting Post Modernism have told you. That very phenomenon, is the kind of phenomenon that Post Modernism deals with. Post Modernism, is not a philosophy on how to live your life contrary to what people will tell you on youtube videos. Rather it's an observation on how people behave. Which is to say irrationally and in relation to power structures, and social structures. Just look at yourself, you are the result of a post modern world. You hate something, admit that you know nothing of it, have taken a moral stance against it, and have place yourself in your own mind in a position where you are objectively correct. Post Modernism simply holds up a mirror for you to see yourself as you are, as a post modern creature, with subjective morals, admittedly based on nothing, believing yourself to be objective and true.
2182
2183I wouldn't call Foucault a leftist per se, especially towards the end. Certainly critical of hierarchy and power structures, but not espousing any mainstream leftist doctrine. Definitely not a communist. I think towards the end he identified as a liberal.
2184
2185And yes, thinking about postmodernism as a leftist movement that has precipitated modern American leftism with its root in the humanities is wrong. In fact, the New Left and its tendency towards extreme politicization and culture war emerged in the mid-1960s, before postmodernism as an intellectual movement even took root in France or elsewhere. You're totally right in that they were literally hungry to apply some sort of intellectualism to their already deeply motivated beliefs.
2186
2187>I wouldn't call Foucault a leftist per se, especially towards the end. Certainly critical of hierarchy and power structures, but not espousing any mainstream leftist doctrine. Definitely not a communist. I think towards the end he identified as a liberal.
2188This case can definitely be made, but if the cards have to be put on the table, his continual participation in leftist activism alone puts him at least left of the center of French politics of the time.
2189
2190--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2191
2192 ( Trannies )
2193
2194“Transgenderism” has often been described as a cult. The designation is in some ways apt. Though lacking a charismatic leader usually found in such movements, other expert descriptions of cults certainly apply: “designed to destabilize an individual’s sense of self by undermining his or her basic consciousness, reality awareness, beliefs and worldview, [and] emotional control.” Cults also lead the target to believe that “anxiety, uncertainty, and self-doubt can be reduced by adopting the concepts put forth by the group.” The promise is a “new identity” that will solve all problems, even as it separates one from family and previous life.
2195
2196This is especially true in cases of so-called Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria, in which previously normal teenagers (usually girls) suddenly announce their desire to transition to the opposite sex. It is readily apparent how a teenager struggling with severe or even common adolescent angst could be lured into such a group.
2197
2198-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2199
2200Well of course it is, the left spends 50 years encouraging hedonism, laxism, dumbing down education and arguing that children should "build their own knowledge", you stop teaching classical literature in schools because it gives an unfair advantage to children of the bourgeoisie, stop teaching philosophy because it's elitist, massively lower standards of education in order to reach equality of outcome, actually pretty much shun classical literature and philosophy as a whole for being bourgeois, just let kids do whatever the fuck they want really ... Guess what happens ? Most people barely read anything in school then they stop reading altogether. Today there are much less working class children receiving higher education than back when there was discipline and hard work in the school system.
2201And now the only people who are still interested in reading are precisely the elitists, the bourgeois, the right or far right, because their families and political environments and private religious schools ignored your shit, played it smart and kept making those people read independently of school.
2202I'm moderately conservative btw but clearly this is all the left's fault and you only have yourselves to blame for this.
2203
2204----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2205
2206( What do you think the defining philosophical trends of the 2020s will be? )
2207
2208Metafiction as guide to reality, a resurgence in Bernays-style propaganda, but metaphysicalized, with a flavor of speculative-fiction-made-real (think Borges). Fantasies of an omnipotent elite reshaping reality according to its whims, and the embracing of fake news, outright and invented historical events. Past fictions become a guide to future actualities – holograms of fucking Johnny Bravo wandering the streets alongside those of Odysseus making his voyage over and over again in the Aegean (tickets will be sold to this). Realism recast as vaguely reactionary at first, then outright fascist. Post-meaning, the medium is the only message. The trajectory of sense becomes tied to what you want to hear, not what I want to say: language screaming through us from the future in self-fulfiling prophecy, using the human body and our digital creations as vehicles. The world falls back to ur-tribalism, mysticism and sacrificing goats: the luxury flat of the future middle class becomes a bunker.
2209
2210----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2211
2212I'm going to write a young adult novel filled to the brim with every young adult trope my friends and I can think of. It'll be very satirical and my target audience won't even realise it.
2213
2214The following are things my friends and I have already brainstormed about and believe have their place in the definitive young adult novel:
2215
2216- Someone dying of a terminal illness
2217
2218- Two teenagers falling in love and facing various obstructions because of it
2219
2220- One of the teenagers must have a strange affinity for nineteenth century poetry (romanticism... shouldn't even have to explain this)
2221
2222- Parents are generally useless
2223
2224- One of the characters must want to study veterinary medicine in the future because she 'just loves animals'
2225
2226- All of the teenage characters have embarrassing nicknames given to them by their parents such as 'candyfloss' and 'margarita'
2227
2228-no one "understands" them
2229
2230- they're freakishly different and go against societal norms even those that are useful and important so they must be unique and superior to everyone else
2231
2232- novel must reference bad music that no one really likes and claim that its great and people don't get it.
2233
2234- glorifies decisions that would be stupid to make in the real world.
2235
2236- all like able and well developed characters must be relegated to the most marginal positions in the story.
2237
2238- There must be references to various David Lynch films because one of the character classifies himself as 'extremely cultured and unfortunately a hipster as cause-and-effect' and always name drops David Lynch film productions or the Talking Heads without realising they aren't underground at all
2239
2240- One of the characters wants to join a jazz group and is in a local indie rock band and wants them to play New Orleans Funeral Jazz inspired songs. Said character only knows basic open chords and can only improvise in the keys of C and G major.
2241
2242- The boy character views sex as something secular, temporal and carnal until eventually he actually engages in sexual intercourse with a girl and promptly falls in love, proving himself wrong in the process. There will be a soliloquy of sorts in which he invokes the spirit of Kanye West's Yeezus and speaks of his newfound humility and how difficult it is to juggle it with his dated pride.
2243
2244- there must be a background character who is diagnosed with a terminal illness but it is only mentioned in passing and he receives no sympathy for it and his sole reason for existence is comic relief at his expense
2245
2246- the girl who wants to be a vet only wants to be a vet because her per dog died in tragic and easily avoidable circumstances but they didn't have insurance. She is a socialist and aspiring veterinarian because of this harrowing series of events.
2247
2248Please add to this list. I want to make sure I fill every niche so it appeals to everyone. I'm pretty sure it already has the makings of a number one international bestseller.