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Văn học và tiếng Anh - Những cuốn sách hay nhất mọi thời đại

Chủ đề trong 'Văn học' bởi thongthiengiaochu, 12/11/2008.

  1. 1 người đang xem box này (Thành viên: 0, Khách: 1)
  1. aliosha1970

    aliosha1970 Thành viên mới

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    Cảm ơn bạn. Nhưng tớ cần file audio cơ..
  2. thongthiengiaochu

    thongthiengiaochu Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    12/10/2005
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    Cuốn Anna Karenina tớ cũng có file Audio rồi. Cảm ơn bạn. Còn cuốn "One hundred years of solitude" thì tớ tìm vàng mắt cũng không thấy file Audio. Híc.
  3. aliosha1970

    aliosha1970 Thành viên mới

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    Audio book của One Hundred years of solitude thì chưa tìm thấy, nhưng tôi có loạt bài giảng về các tác phẩm văn văn học nổi tiếng trên thế giới, do giao sư Arnold Weinstein - Ph.D của Harvard Un - giảng cho các SV bên ý học, trong đó có giảng về tác phẩm này. Files dưới dạng audio. Chất lượng tốt
    Bạn nào có nhu cầu, tôi sẽ up lên giúp. Toàn học tiếng Anh theo cách này. Hiệu quả cực
  4. vxyNNS

    vxyNNS Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    10/02/2008
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    877
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    1
    Quá hay, nhờ bạn up hết lên được không
  5. aliosha1970

    aliosha1970 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    21/12/2003
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    636
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    Của cậu đây..
    Nhớ vote * cho bạn. Bạn cần sao để mang về cho Gấu chơi
    Classic Novels: Meeting the Challenge of Great Literature
    (36 lectures, 30 minutes/lecture)
    Course No. 2310
    Taught by Arnold Weinstein
    Brown University
    Ph.D., Harvard University
    If you could travel anywhere in the world, where would you go? Europe? South America? The remote reaches of the African continent?
    What if you could travel in time as well? Imagine yourself transported to the sparkling court society of 18th-century France, or sailing aboard a 19th-century whaling ship. What secrets would you learn about the human con***ion and the lives lived in distant lands and eras?
    And what about the most remarkable journey of all: the voyage inside the mind of another human being, in which you plumb the thoughts and emotions that usually remain hidden deep within? What does this journey tell us about the puzzling, sometimes shocking thing we call human nature? More importantly, what does it tell us about ourselves?
    These adventures await you in Classic Novels: Meeting the Challenge of Great Literature, taught by veteran Teaching Company Professor Arnold Weinstein. As Professor Weinstein says, "Life flows onto the pages of the books we read." More than a mere "slice of life," classic novels perform a sort of miracle, jolting us to see the remarkable, often provocative truths that underlie the human con***ion. To experience these extraordinary novels is to ask deep and sometimes unsettling questions about our lives and our world.
    Classic Novels is your invitation to the dazzling, surprising, and deeply moving worlds revealed through these great works. You''ll move beyond what is often offered in literary courses: plot synopses, anecdotes, facts about where and when a novel was written. With Professor Weinstein''s guidance you''ll gain something greater and more profound: an opportunity to experience the startling brilliance that makes each of these works a classic.
    What Is a Classic?
    What exactly is a classic? For many?"and maybe for you?"a "classic" means a book you should''ve read, or one that you have read and didn''t like. Perhaps you''ve already encountered these great works, either in a course or while reading on your own. Maybe you think you know what to expect from a classic: engaging stories told by a master storyteller.
    But that''s only part of the story. What makes a work a classic, Professor Weinstein explains, is its ability to present the world as a more energetic, vibrant, and unpredictable place than we ever imagined. Classic novels open our eyes to the true nature of our world, and take us across the divide that separates mind from mind. They reveal to us our essential humanity, both its beauty and its horror, and hold the mirror up to our unknown selves.
    With Professor Weinstein as your guide, you''ll view this startling reality as it is unveiled by master authors. Along the way, you''ll encounter some of the greatest names in novelistic fiction, including Dickens, Joyce, Tolstoy, Balzac, and Proust. Whether you read along with the course or choose to return later to these great works, you''ll find that each lecture provides provocative food for thought about the worlds these authors created.
    What is revealed is a notion of the "classic" that goes far beyond literary schools and theoretical approaches. A true classic speaks to the heart and soul, with a message of truth that echoes in our lives long after we''ve turned the final page.
    Epic Explorations of Good and Evil
    This epic journey into classic literature begins in the 18th century with Daniel Defoe''s remarkable tale of the prostitute and thief Moll Flanders. As you move through the pages of this great novel, you''ll travel back in time to the London of three centuries ago, transported by Defoe''s precise and evocative prose.
    While Defoe''s journalistic style perfectly conveys the world of his amoral heroine, it is just one example of how great authors use the literary arts to create a world on the page. In just the first few works covered by this course, you''ll view the novel as a sort of aesthetic shape-shifter, twisting and bending to fit a wide range of themes, styles, and historical contexts.
    Take, for example, Pierre Choderlos de Laclos''s Les Liaisons Dangereuses, which uses an exchange of letters to provide a glimpse into the inner workings of two decadent seducers, or consider Lawrence Sterne''s Tristram Shandy, a playful, capricious text that delights in flaunting the conventions of narrative.
    After this introduction to the dazzling variety of forms the novel can take, you''ll sample the works of 19th-century authors. The authors of this "golden age" unfailingly find the epic in everyday life, exploring the unending battle of good and evil that unfolds over a lifetime and the tumultuous drama of a child growing to adulthood.
    From Madame Bovary, Gustave Flaubert''s tale of a bored provincial housewife, to Herman Melville''s towering saga of whaling in New England, Moby-Dick, you''ll experience firsthand how these remarkable authors used scenes of everyday life as the backdrop for grand struggles.
    A Voyage Inward: The Modern Mind
    With the last half of the course, you''ll take a journey of a different kind: this time, into the inner recesses of the human mind. Professor Weinstein guides you through the challenging but rewarding masterpieces of the Modernist movement, where you''ll encounter a new vision of what it means to live within the world of the novel.
    This new artistic landscape includes the surreal dystopia of Franz Kafka''s great works?"his bleak and frequently disorienting exploration of modern alienation?"and the richly symbolic Africa of Joseph Conrad''s Heart of Darkness, where the hidden evil of human nature is horribly unmasked.
    With the rise of Modernism and the experimental Postmodernist works that follow, you''ll learn about the innovative narrative techniques these authors used to reflect a new understanding of the self and our perception of reality as fragmented and constantly changing, as seen in works as diverse as Virginia Woolf''s To the Lighthouse and William Faulkner''s As I Lay Dying.
    With dazzling works such as these, you''ll gain profound insights into the craft of novel writing and gain a deep appreciation for classic storytelling in its many forms.
    Writing the Story of Life
    It is this appreciation of the art of the story that is perhaps the most valuable aspect of this course. As Professor Weinstein explains, "Literature is miraculous because it makes available to us things that we cannot get in any other way."
    In these great books, we get something we never see in our day-to-day world: the whole story of a life. When you open a classic novel, you open yourself to a powerful experience as you embark on a journey alongside the characters. As you trace the many trajectories of these lives, you begin to comprehend the patterns that develop over a lifetime.
    And that, perhaps, is the most pressing reason to read these great works. To live with these characters and experience the lives contained on these pages is to confront a crucial question: "How would you write the story of your own life?" Join Professor Weinstein for this thought-provoking journey into the world of Classic Novels, and find your own answer.
    Course Lecture Titles
    1. Meeting the Challenge of Great Literature
    2. Defoe?"Moll Flanders
    3. Sterne?"Tristram Shandy
    4. Laclos?"Les Liaisons Dangereuses
    5. Laclos?"Les Liaisons Dangereuses, Part 2
    6. Balzac?"Père Goriot
    7. Balzac?"Père Goriot, Part 2
    8. Brontë?"Wuthering Heights
    9. Brontë?"Wuthering Heights, Part 2
    10. Melville?"Moby-Dick
    11. Melville?"Moby-Dick, Part 2
    12. Dickens?"Bleak House
    13. Dickens?"Bleak House, Part 2
    14. Flaubert?"Madame Bovary
    15. Flaubert?"Madame Bovary, Part 2
    16. Tolstoy?"War and Peace
    17. Tolstoy?"War and Peace, Part 2
    18. Dostoevsky?"The Brothers Karamazov
    19. Dostoevsky?"The Brothers Karamazov, Part 2
    20. Conrad?"Heart of Darkness
    21. Mann?"Death in Venice
    22. Kafka?""The Metamorphosis"
    23. Kafka?"The Trial
    24. Proust?"Remembrance of Things Past
    25. Proust?"Remembrance of Things Past, Part 2
    26. Proust?"Remembrance of Things Past, Part 3
    27. Joyce?"Ulysses
    28. Joyce?"Ulysses, Part 2
    29. Joyce?"Ulysses, Part 3
    30. Woolf?"To the Lighthouse
    31. Woolf?"To the Lighthouse, Part 2
    32. Faulkner?"As I Lay Dying
    33. Faulkner?"As I Lay Dying, Part 2
    34. García Márquez?"One Hundred Years of Solitude
    35. One Hundred Years of Solitude, Part 2

    36. Ending the Course, Beginning the World
    Code:
    http://rapidshare.com/files/123055296/Classic_Novels.part01.rar
    http://rapidshare.com/files/123058144/Classic_Novels.part02.rar
    http://rapidshare.com/files/123061010/Classic_Novels.part03.rar
    http://rapidshare.com/files/123063748/Classic_Novels.part04.rar
    http://rapidshare.com/files/123066678/Classic_Novels.part05.rar
    http://rapidshare.com/files/123069384/Classic_Novels.part06.rar
    http://rapidshare.com/files/123072316/Classic_Novels.part07.rar
    http://rapidshare.com/files/123073279/Classic_Novels.part08.rar

    Cách load files dạng rapid.
    Thông thường rapid chỉ cho load 1 lần 1 file, sau đó người load phải đợi khoảng 15-60 phút mới có quyền load file tiếp theo.
    Có cách đánh lừa rapid:" SAU KHI LOAD FILE XUỐNG, BẠN LẬP TỨC TẮT MODEM MÁY TÍNH VÀ BẬT MODEM LẠI NGAY. CÁCH NÀY ĐÁNH LỪA RAPID VÀ BẠN CÓ THỀ LOAD CÁC FILES LIÊN TỤC MÀ KHÔNG PHẢI CHỜ"
    Nhân tiện, tôi cũng còn có các lectures khác của các giáo sư bên Mỹ giảng do công ty Teaching Company thu và phát hành. Các bài giảng này dưới dạng audio, chất lượng cực tốt do các nghệ sỹ chuyên nghiệp đóng vai giảng (đoán vậy) và cũng có thể do chính các giáo sư đó giảng. Lectures ở nhiều nhóm đề tài khác nhau, chủ yếu là KHXH như: Lịch Sử, Văn Học, Quan Hệ Quốc Tế, Tôn Giáo.. Tôi thường xuyên nghe các bài giảng này vừa để luyện Anh văn và học thêm kiến thức
    Vì đây là box văn chương nên không thể up lên tất cả. Bạn nào cần, pm cho tôi..
    Còn ai lười load thì có thể gặp, tôi cho chép thoải mái. Có điều tôi ở SG xa xôi
  6. vxyNNS

    vxyNNS Thành viên mới

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    10/02/2008
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    Đã bình chọn 5* cho bác. Em rất thích cái món này.. Nếu bác có bài giảng của các ĐH khác thì nhờ bác quăng lên cho em. Em có acc rapid, down tẹt
  7. khidotdh888

    khidotdh888 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    28/02/2009
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    Cảm ơn rất nhiều ý kiến rất hay
  8. aliosha1970

    aliosha1970 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    21/12/2003
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    Ui, Bò sữa giàu quá, có cả tk của rapid nữa cơ. Ghen tị quá đi
    Trước tiên Bò sữa cứ load bài audio kia trước rùi nghe thử đi đã, nếu happy, phản hồi lại, tôi sẽ up tiếp những bài giảng khác, nhưng có lẽ cũng chỉ là những bài liên quan đền Văn học là phù hợp hơn cả (box văn học mà), còn các đề tài khác thì sợ không đúng nơi, mod mắng rùi lại xóa mất..hic hic..nếu bò sữa cần, pm riêng, tôi sẽ gửi. Nói thật nhá, chịu khó nghe và thực hành tiếng là trình tiếng Anh lên hẳn sau vài tháng bên cạnh khối kiến thức không hề nhỏ mà bò sữa thu thập sau mỗi bài giảng
    chúc vui
  9. vxyNNS

    vxyNNS Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    10/02/2008
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    Cám ơn bác :) Acc rapid giờ cũng rẻ mà. Chỗ audio của bác, em load xong từ tối hôm qua rồi. Đang nghe dần. Nhờ bác send link cho các bài giảng khác nữa được không ạ ?
  10. aliosha1970

    aliosha1970 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
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    Được rùi. Bò sữa thích thì tớ sẽ gửi dần dần. Nhưng trong box này, tớ sẽ gửi những bài giảng liên quan đến văn học và nghệ thuật thui nhé. Còn nếu bò sữa thích nghe bài giảng trong các lĩnh vực khác như: Triết, LS, QHQT.. thì pm nhé
    .Books That Have Made History: Books That Can Change Your Life(36 lectures, 30 minutes/lecture)
    Course No. 4600
    Taught by J. Rufus Fears
    University of Oklahoma
    Ph.D., Harvard University
    What makes a written work eternal?"its message still so fundamental to the way we live that it continues to speak to us, hundreds or thousands of years distant from the lifetime of its author?
    Why do we still respond to an ancient Greek playwright''s tale of the Titan so committed to humanity''s survival that he is willing to endure eternal torture in his defiance of the gods? To the cold advice of a 16th-century Florentine exiled from the corridors of power? To the words of a World War I German veteran writing of the horrors of endless trench warfare?
    Most important of all, what do such works?""Great Books" in every sense?"mean to us? Can they deepen our self-knowledge and wisdom? Are our lives changed in any meaningful way by the experience of reading them?
    In this course, Professor J. Rufus Fears presents his choices of some of the most essential writings in history. These are books that have shaped the minds of great individuals, who in turn have shaped events of historic magnitude.
    This course does not analyze the literature or discuss it in detail; rather, it focuses on intellectual history and ethics. What Professor Fears does is to take the underlying ideas of each great work and show how these ideas can be put to use in a moral and ethical life.
    Beginning with his definition of a great book as one that possesses a great theme of enduring importance, noble language that "elevates the soul and ennobles the mind," and a universality that enables it to "speak across the ages," Professor Fears examines a body of work that offers an extraordinary gift of wisdom to those willing to receive it.
    From the Aeneid and the Book of Job to Othello and 1984, the selections range in time from the 3rd millennium B.C. to the 20th century, and in locale from Mesopotamia and China to Europe and America.
    Course Lecture Titles
    1. Bonhoeffer, Letters and Papers From Prison
    2. Homer, Iliad
    3. Marcus Aurelius, Me***ations
    4. Bhagavad Gita
    5. Book of Exodus
    6. Gospel of Mark
    7. Koran
    8. Gilgamesh
    9. Beowulf
    10. Book of Job
    11. Aeschylus, Oresteia
    12. Euripides, Bacchae
    13. Plato, Phaedo
    14. Dante, The Divine Comedy
    15. Shakespeare, Othello, the Moor of Venice
    16. Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound
    17. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago
    18. Shakespeare, ****** Caesar
    19. George Orwell, 1984
    20. Vergil, Aeneid
    21. Pericles, Oration; Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    22. Remarque, All Quiet on the Western Front
    23. Confucius, The Analects
    24. Machiavelli, The Prince
    25. Plato, Republic
    26. John Stuart Mill, On Liberty
    27. Sir Thomas Malory, Morte d''Arthur
    28. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Faust, Part 1
    29. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Faust, Part 2
    30. Henry David Thoreau, Walden
    31. Gibbon, Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
    32. Lord Acton, The History of Freedom
    33. Cicero, On Moral Duties (De Officiis)
    34. Gandhi, An Autobiography
    35. Churchill, My Early Life; Painting as a Pastime; WWII
    36. Lessons from the Great Books
    http://rapidshare.com/files/102399023/Books_That_Have_Made_History_-_Books_that_Can_Change_Your_Life__J._Rufus_Fears_.part1.rar
    http://rapidshare.com/files/102428199/Books_That_Have_Made_History_-_Books_that_Can_Change_Your_Life__J._Rufus_Fears_.part2.rar
    http://rapidshare.com/files/102435254/Books_That_Have_Made_History_-_Books_that_Can_Change_Your_Life__J._Rufus_Fears_.part3.rar
    Chúc vui

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