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The Duchess of Malfi's Apricots, and Other Literary Fruits
 
 
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The Duchess of Malfi's Apricots, and Other Literary Fruits [Hardcover]

Robert Palter (Author)

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Book Description

December 2002
What is the powerful cultural significance of mangoes to contemporary Hispanic American writers? How does the strange sex life of figs relate to literature? Why are bananas the humorous fruit par excellence, and how are grapefruits anomalous among the citruses?

Literary episodes featuring fruit are pervasive across genre and cultural tradition, occurring in the Bible, modern and contemporary literature, and everywhere in between. Robert Palter provides a meticulously researched and beautifully illustrated account of this phenomenon. The Duchess of Malfi's Apricots, and Other Literary Fruits is a lively and far-ranging investigation of the way fruit has been used in literature to express the entire gamut of human experience. The visual arts—including sculpture, painting, and calligraphy—are also richly represented, with some fifty illustrations, most of them in color.

The depth of Palter's research is evident in the stunning variety of texts he examines. Citing hundreds of examples from some two dozen languages, Palter discusses everything from novels, short stories, and lyric poems to nursery rhymes, fairy tales, movie scripts, and opera librettos. All foreign-language texts are quoted in English, often rendered by distinguished translators. The author’s own genial and informed voice sets the tone for a lively conversation about the significance of literary fruit. Concise explanations of relevant horticulture and plant physiology are presented in a manner convincing for the specialist but also readily accessible to general readers.

This delightful book offers an engaging and thoroughly documented journey through literary and art history in its survey of the surprisingly intricate and evocative variety of references to fruit.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"A glorious book, one to delight modern lovers of Robert Burton, Sir Thomas Browne, and Johnny Appleseed." -- Douglass Parker, University of Texas, Austin

About the Author

Born in Queens, New York, ROBERT PALTER earned a degree in chemistry at Columbia University and a Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Chicago. During World War II, he served in the U.S. Army, working on the Manhattan Project. Currently the Dana Professor Emeritus of the History of Science at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut, Palter has also taught at the University of Texas and the University of Chicago. A scholar with wide-ranging interests, he has published on the philosophy and history of science as well as eighteenth-century intellectual history. Palter lives in New Britain, Connecticut.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
To contrast with the fine tribute to apples by Plutarch (b. before 50; d. after 120 C.E.), another Greek text, perhaps half a millennium earlier, may be quoted from an even more prestigious source-if it is indeed by Plato (ca. 429-327 B.C.E.), as the (doubtful) traditional attribution would have it: I am an apple [malon] tossed by one who loves you. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
apricot episode, fruit episodes, apple episodes, cherries plenty, fig gesture, literary episodes, food episodes, young fig tree, wine poems, goblin men, colored reproduction, seventeenth century verse, ordinary apples, gooseberry fool, blue wine, fruit that can
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Song of Songs, United States, Garden of Eden, Middle Ages, Robert Frost, Garcia Lorca, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Greek Anthology, Los Angeles, New England, African American, Ivan Ivanych, Moor Park, Raphaelle Peale, Abraham Cowley, Family Happiness, Goblin Market, John Hollander, Old Testament, Hebrew Bible, Isaac Newton, Italian Renaissance, Jane Austen, North America
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Front Cover | Front Flap | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Flap | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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