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         Stein Gertrude:     more books (100)
  1. Three Lives by Stein Gertrude, 2008-05-08
  2. A Gertrude Stein Companion: content with the example
  3. Gertrude Stein: Selections (Poets for the Millennium) by Gertrude Stein, 2008-04-14
  4. Mama Dada: Gertrude Stein's Avant-Garde Theatre (Studies in Modern Drama) by Sarah Bay-Cheng, 2005-09-29
  5. Everybody Who Was Anybody: A Biography of Gertrude Stein by Janet Hobhouse, 1989-08-01
  6. How I Read Gertrude Stein by Lew Welch, 2001-01-01
  7. Tender buttons: objects, food, rooms by Gertrude Stein, Paul Padgette, et all 2010-08-08
  8. Wars I Have Seen by Gertrude Stein, 1984-04
  9. Four Saints in Three Acts by Gertrude Stein, 1934-01-01
  10. Four Works by Gertrude Stein (Halcyon Classics) by Gertrude Stein, 2010-08-11
  11. THE MAKING OF AMERICANS : BEING A HISTORY OF A FAMILY'S PROGRESS by Gertrude Stein, 1908
  12. Picasso by Gertrude Stein, 1984-09-01
  13. The Letters of Gertrude Stein and Thornton Wilder (Henry McBride Series in Modernism and Mo)
  14. Two Lives: Gertrude and Alice by Ms. Janet Malcolm, 2008-09-16

21. Gertrude Stein
A Complete Bibliography of Works by gertrude stein Other gertrude stein Web Pages. gertrude stein Memorial Webpage; About gertrude stein Repertory
http://www.sci.fi/~solaris/stein/
Note: There are a number of far more useful sources for information about Gertrude Stein, e.g. http://www.ags.uci.edu/~mjpowers/stein_resources.html Thanks for stopping by, though.
Online Texts
Other Gertrude Stein Web Pages
After September 17th, 1996, this page has been visited times.

22. Gertrude Stein
www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/s_z/stein/stein.htm gertrude stein, The Geographical History of America (1936)
http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/s_z/stein/stein.htm
Photo By Carl Van Vechten Gertrude Stein (1874-1946) Stein's Life and Careerby Linda Wagner-Martin On "Patriarchal Poetry" An Essay on "Patriarchal Poetry" by Karen Ford A Gallery of Photographs of Stein ... External Links Prepared and Compiled by Cary Nelson Return to Modern American Poetry Home Return to Poets Index

23. The Gertrude Stein Repertory Theatre
Their goal is to reinvent the process of creating theater, from training and education to collaboration and production. They have a particular interest in
http://www.gertstein.org/
about the gertrude stein repertory theatre
Address: 15 West 26th Street, Second Floor , New York, New York, 10010 Vox: (212) 725.7254 Fax: (212) 725.7267 Email: infogs@gertstein.org
Arthur Miller working with students GSRT's main stage is devoted to developing classics in modern theatrical literature that resist production using traditional theater techniques. The recipient of OBIE and American Theatre Wing Awards for its co-production with Mabou Mines of An Epidog , GSRT is now in pre-production for a mixed-media, multinational adaptation of Gertrude Stein's 1911 visionary novel, The Making of Americans , for live presentation. Merging digital technology and traditional live performance, GSRT will re-imagine Stein's monumental work for its virtual stage, bringing to life with state-of-the-art digital technologies and an international cast a remarkably prescient yet complex narrative.

24. Gertrude Stein Quotes
105 quotes and quotations by gertrude stein. gertrude stein A writer should write with his eyes and a painter paint with his ears. gertrude stein
http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/g/gertrude_stein.html

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Date of Birth:
February 3
Date of Death: July 29 Nationality: American Find on Amazon: Gertrude Stein Related Authors: Henry David Thoreau Mark Twain Henry Miller Helen Keller ... Susan Sontag A diary means yes indeed. Gertrude Stein A house in the country is not the same as a country house. Gertrude Stein A masterpiece... may be unwelcome but it is never dull. Gertrude Stein A real failure does not need an excuse. It is an end in itself. Gertrude Stein A vegetable garden in the beginning looks so promising and then after all little by little it grows nothing but vegetables, nothing, nothing but vegetables. Gertrude Stein A writer should write with his eyes and a painter paint with his ears. Gertrude Stein Action and reaction are equal and opposite. Gertrude Stein America is my country and Paris is my hometown. Gertrude Stein Americans are very friendly and very suspicious, that is what Americans are and that is what always upsets the foreigner, who deals with them, they are so friendly how can they be so suspicious they are so suspicious how can they be so friendly but they just are.

25. PAL: Gertrude Stein (1874-1946)
Chessman, Harriet S. The Public Is Invited to Dance Representation, the Body, and Dialogue in gertrude stein. Stanford Stanford UP, 1989.
http://web.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap7/stein.html
PAL: Perspectives in American Literature - A Research and Reference Guide - An Ongoing Project Paul P. Reuben (To send an email, please click on my name above.) Chapter 7: Gertrude Stein (1874-1946) Portraits and Prayers: A GS Page Time-Sense: An Online Quarterly Primary Works Selected Bibliography 1980-1999 ... Home Page
Source: The GS Memorial Webpage "Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose." from "Sacred Emily" (1913), a poem included in Geography and Plays . Boston: Four Seas Co., 1922. 178-188. Reprint: U of Nebraska Press, 1993. 178. Primary Works Three Lives Tender Buttons Geography and Plays, 1922; The Making of Americans Four Saints in Three Acts The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas The Geographical History of America Ida, A Novel The Mother of Us All Patriarchal Poetry Top Selected Bibliography 1980-1999 Adams, Timothy D. Telling Lies in Modern American Autobiography . Chapel Hill : U of North Carolina P, 1990. Benstock, Shari. Women of the Left Bank: Paris, 1900-1940 . Austin: U of Texas P, 1986. Berry, Ellen E.

26. Gertrude Stein — Infoplease.com
gertrude stein, Alice Toklas, and Albert Barnes looking like a Jew in The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas.(Critical essay) (Shofar)
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0846616.html
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    Stein, Gertrude
    Stein, Gertrude, James , she began premedical work at Johns Hopkins. In 1902, relinquishing her studies, she went abroad and from 1903 until her death lived chiefly in Paris. For many years her secretary and lover was Alice B. Toklas. In Paris, Stein became interested in modern art movements; she encouraged and purchased the work of many new painters, including Picasso and Matisse . During the 1920s, she was the leader of a cultural salon that included such writers as

27. Washington, D.C. Gertrude Stein Democratic Club
Gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered persons organized to mobilize the fight for rights in the metropolitan area. Features news, meetings, events,
http://www.steindemocrats.org/
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28. Gertrude Stein Quotes
Quotes by gertrude stein part of an extensive collection of quotations by notable women.
http://womenshistory.about.com/od/quotes/a/gertrude_stein.htm
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Women's History
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    Gertrude Stein (1874-1926)
    By Jone Johnson Lewis , About.com
    Filed In:
  • Art, Music, Writers, Media Writers Women Writers 1901-2000 Gertrude Stein
  • American expatriate writer, her Paris home was a salon for artists and writers between the two World Wars. She lived with her companion Alice B. Toklas from 1912 until her death. Selected Gertrude Stein Quotations Any one doing something and standing is one doing something and standing. Any one doing something and standing is one who is standing and doing something. Some one was doing something and was standing. That one was doing something standing. Related Resources for Gertrude Stein More Women's Quotes: A B C D ... Z Explore Women's Voices and Women's History About These Quotes Quote collection assembled by

    29. UbuWeb Sound - Gertrude Stein
    2005 Estate of gertrude stein. Used with permission of Estate of gertrude stein, through its Literary Executor, Mr. Stanford Gann, Jr. of Levin Gann,
    http://www.ubu.com/sound/stein.html

    UbuWeb Sound

    UbuWeb

    Gertrude Stein
    Working notes by Ulla Dydo The Making Of Americans
    Written 1903 - 1911. Only very early notes were written in 1903 in New York; basically the novel was rewritten and rewritten in Europe.
    , recorded in New York, Winter 1934-35 Matisse
    Written in Paris, early 1911
    Matisse (2:47)
    , New York, Recorded in New York, Winter 1934-35 A Valentine to Sherwood Anderson
    Written in Paris, 1922
    A Valentine to Sherwood Anderson (3:46)
    , Recorded in New York, Winter 1934-35 If I Told Him: A Completed Portrait of Picasso Text If I Told Him: A Completed Portrait of Picasso (3:42) , recorded in New York, Winter 1934-35 The Fifteenth Of November . . . T. S. Eliot Written Paris, fall 1924, perhaps upon Eliot's visit to rue de Fleurus. Madame Recamier. An Opera. Written in Biligmin, September 1930. Only a very short excerpt of this long text is included in the record. perhaps for lack of (recording) space. It's unfortunate, for this short excerpt in no way represents the libretto. Madame Recamier: An Opera (3:25) , Recorded in New York, Winter 1934-35 How She Bowed To Her Brother Written in Paris, late 1931. Title used here (with "How") is in ms and in opening sentence; other publications leave out the "how."

    30. North Side: People: Gertrude Stein
    North Side gertrude stein.
    http://www.clpgh.org/exhibit/neighborhoods/northside/nor_n101a.html
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    North Side: Gertrude Stein
    Gertrude Stein
    Born: 3 February 1874. . Allegheny, Pennsylvania.
    Died: 27 July 1946.
    Buried: Pere Lachaise Cemetery, France.
    Gertrude Stein Forgotten or Unknown
    "Gert's poems are bunk."
    Speculations, or Post-Impressionism in Prose, by Mabel Dodge
    "In Gertrude Stein's writing every word lives"
    A Letter from Gertrude Stein
    "I was born in Alleghany [sic]."
    Birthplace of Gertrude Stein
    "What makes America what it is"
    eople arrative utline eighborhoods ... Site map

    31. Glbtq >> Literature >> Stein, Gertrude
    In addition to becomingwith Alice B. Toklashalf of an iconic lesbian couple, gertrude stein was an important innovator and transformer of the English
    http://www.glbtq.com/literature/stein_g.html
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    Alpha Index: A-B C-F G-K L-Q ... T-Z Subjects: A-B C-E F-L M-Z
    Stein, Gertrude (1874-1946)
    page: In addition to becomingwith Alice B. Toklashalf of an iconic lesbian couple, Gertrude Stein was an important innovator and transformer of the English language. Stein, who later delighted in teasing officials with the difficult spelling of her birthplace, was born in Allegheny, Pennsylvania, on February 3, 1874, the youngest child of a prosperous family of German-Jewish descent. During her childhood, Stein's family resided temporarily in Europe and later moved to Oakland, California, where she was educated both privately and in public school. Sponsor Message.
    The deaths during her adolescence of her overbearing father and her self-effacing mother left Stein in the care of her older brother Michael, who became the benevolent patriarch of the family. The Harvard Years In 1893, Stein accompanied her brother Leo, with whom she was very close, to Harvard. There she studied psychology at Harvard Annex (Radcliffe College) under William James, the author of

    32. Gertrude Stein Club Of Greater Pittsburgh (GSPCGP)
    The gertrude stein Political Club is a Pittsburgh, PA based organization that provides information about candidates positions on issues important to the
    http://www.gertrudesteinclub.org/
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    33. Gallery Gertrude Stein
    Gallery gertrude stein, Fine Arts Dealer. 200 West 57th Street, New York, NY 10019. Tel 212595-0161 Fax 212-765-6178 Email aethe@aol.com.
    http://www.gallerygertrudestein.com/
    200 West 57th Street New York, NY 10019 Tel (212) 535-0600 Fax (212) 765-6178
    Gallery
    Artists Exhibitions Jazz ... Contact
    Click on the above links to view available works.
    selImg('cover',1,22)
    For inquiries regarding availability and pricing, please contact the gallery.

    34. Gertrude Stein Life Stories, Books, & Links
    Stories about gertrude stein s life and Love Notes to Alice B. Toklas, The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, Letters to Thornton Wilder.
    http://www.todayinliterature.com/biography/gertrude.stein.asp
    TABLE OF CONTENTS Gertrude Stein - Life Stories, Books, and Links Biographical Information
    Stories about Gertrude Stein

    Selected works by this author

    Selected books about / related to this author
    ...
    Recommended links
    BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION Gertrude Stein (1874 - 1946) Category: American Literature Born: February 3, 1874
    Allegheny,Pennsylvania, United States Died: July 27, 1946
    Neuilly-sur-Seine, France Related authors:
    Alice B. Toklas
    Ernest Hemingway Guillaume Apollinaire James Joyce ... list all writers Gertrude Stein - LIFE STORIES Stein in America
    On this day in 1934 Four Saints in Three Acts , by Gertrude Stein and Virgil Thomson premiered. The opening was a celebrated event on its own Buckminster Fuller arrived to it in his Dymaxion Car but it also inspired Stein to visit America later in the year for a lecture tour. Her first visit in thirty years made tickertape headlines on the NY Times building and in the press: "Gerty Gerty Stein Stein is Back Home Home Back." Toklas After Stein
    On this day in 1967 Alice B. Toklas died, at the age of eighty-nine. Toklas spent her last twenty-one years without Gertrude Stein, but with the same idiosyncratic devotion to Stein's genius as she had throughout their thirty-three years together. This did not protect her from those managing Stein's estate, and at eighty-seven she was evicted from the flat which the two had shared for decades.

    35. GERTRUDE STEIN: A Rose Is A Rose Is A Rose
    gertrude stein, famous throughout literature and the world for her quote Rose is a rose is a rose coined, according to Ernest Hemingway s epigraph to The
    http://www.geocities.com/jiji_muge/isarose.html
    A ROSE IS A ROSE IS A ROSE
    GERTRUDE STEIN
    Gertrude Stein, famous throughout literature and the world for her quote Rose is a rose is a rose coined, according to Ernest Hemingway's epigraph to The Sun Also Rises (1926), the equally famous phrase "Lost Generation" as well. The Lost Generation refered to a group of expatriated American writers who resided primarily in Paris in the 1920's and 1930's. The group consisted of many influential American writers including Hemingway, Fitzgerald, William Carlos Williams, Thornton Wilder, Archibald MacLeish and Hart Crane. These writers were disillusioned with the American society and bitter about their World War I experiences, of which, so many had experienced as "members" of the so-called Literary Ambulance Drivers , including Stein herself. As a woman she was prohibited from actually being on the battlefield during hostilities, but equally in harms way, she drove for the American Fund for French Wounded that, from June 1917 to March 1918, relocated eight hundred families. The women then followed the battles as the German counter-offensive of March 1918 forced them into the mobile war. Posted on the front lines, they opened itinerant canteens and assistance centers for refugees and evacuated the civilian populations. When the Germans broke through the French lines in June 1918, they had to pull back quickly and set up headquarters in Paris. In October 1918, the German front had still not given way, and they returned to the Aisne area just a few kilometres from the enemy lines. She also spent a great deal of time visiting and caring for the sick and wounded in hospitals.

    36. Gertrude Stein (1874-1946)
    There exists no cottage industry explicating her difficulty, so one does not have easy sources of data such as Readers Guide to gertrude stein to which
    http://www9.georgetown.edu/faculty/bassr/heath/syllabuild/iguide/stein.html
    Gertrude Stein (1874-1946)
    Contributing Editor: Cynthia Secor
    Classroom Issues and Strategies
    Many students will have heard that Stein is "difficult" so they come to her work expecting not to understand. They expect "style" and "experimental strategies," but not content. There exists no cottage industry "explicating" her difficulty, so one does not have easy sources of data such as Readers' Guide to Gertrude Stein to which to refer students. In addition, her lesbianism and feminism put off some readers, if they get far enough into the text to see it. One needs to begin by saying that these texts are the creation of an extremely well-educated womanan American, a Jew, the child of immigrant parents, a lesbian, and a feministwhose life experience and literary production bridge the Victorian and modern eras. Her two enduring concerns are to portray the experience of woman and to explore what it means to present the fact or act of perceptionwhich can be described as how we organize what we see. How Gertrude Stein organizes what she sees and how she presents "seeing": this is probably enough metaphysics for a beginning.

    37. CONTEXT: William Carlos Williams On The Work Of Gertrude Stein
    CONTEXT William Carlos Williams on the work of gertrude stein.
    http://www.centerforbookculture.org/context/no6/williams.html
    No. 6
    Online Edition SPECIAL SALEany 100 Dalkey titles for $500 "The Work of Gertrude Stein"
    William Carlos Williams By locating traces of Tristram Shandy in Stein's Geography and Plays, Williams identifies an entire tradition of literature that is concerned foremost with language rather than logic, with "the words." Would I have seen a white bear!
    (for how can I imagine it?)
    Let it be granted that whatever is new in literature the germ of it will be found somewhere in the writings of other times; only the modern emphasis gives work a present distinction. The necessity for this modern focus and the meaning of the changes involved are, however, another matter, the everlasting stumbling block to criticism. Here is a theme worth development in the case of Gertrude Steinyet signally neglected. Why in fact have we not heard more generally from American scholars upon the writings of Miss Stein? Is it lack of heart or ability or just that theirs is an enthusiasm which fades rapidly of its own nature before the risks of today? Now I quote from Sterne:
      The verbs auxiliary we are concerned in here, continued my father, are am; was; have; had; do; did; could; owe; make; made; suffer; shall; should; will; would; can; ought; used; or is wont . . . or with these questions added to them;Is it? Was it? Will it be? . . . Or affirmatively . . . Or chronologically . . . Or hypothetically . . . If it was? If it was not? What would follow?If the French beat the English? If the Sun should go out of the Zodiac?

    38. Project MUSE
    Virtual Gallery Photographs of gertrude stein. IMAGE LINK=. Front Cover. stein at work at 27 rue de Fleurus, c. 1914. Courtesy of the Beinecke Rare Book
    http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/mfs/v042/42.3virtual_gallery.html
    How Do I Get This Article? Athens Login
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    This article is available through Project MUSE, an electronic journals collection made available to subscribing libraries NOTE: Please do NOT contact Project MUSE for a login and password. See How Do I Get This Article? for more information. If you have password access to this journal, please login below. (Help with Login)
    Login: Password: Virtual Gallery: Photographs of Gertrude Stein
    MFS Modern Fiction Studies - Volume 42, Number 3, Fall 1996
    The Johns Hopkins University Press
    - Virtual Gallery: Photographs of Gertrude Stein - Modern Fiction Studies 42:3 Modern Fiction Studies 42.3 (1996) Virtual Gallery: Photographs of Gertrude Stein Front Cover. Stein at... Search Journals About MUSE

    39. Epitaph Gertrude Stein -Rules Of The Game
    It is left to the individual author wether he/she follow the structure of the prescribed stanza by gertrude stein (diminishing/increasing length of line,
    http://auer.netzliteratur.net/epitaph/spielreg.htm
    when this you see remember me
    Epitaph Gertrude Stein
    Information about our projects Spielregeln deutsch
    Rules of the game.
    An international epitaph is to be created in honour of Gertrude Stein, who died on 27 July 1946.
    The subject prescribed for this international epitaph is the last (No. LXXXIII) of the Stanzas in meditation ("Why am I if I am..."). We are looking for textual, audio and grafic elaborations of the theme.
    The texts should, like the prescribed stanza, consist of fourteen lines/verses. The last verse must read: These stanzas are done. It is left to the individual author wether he/she follow the structure of the prescribed stanza by Gertrude Stein (diminishing/increasing length of line, rhymes, etc.) or react to other texts of the Epitaph in free association. The text should at any event be written in the author's mother tongue and if possible accompanied by the rough translation or a free version in German.
    The audio creations must for technical reasons be noted in letters. Graphic contributions should not exceed to format 30 x 30 cm.
    E-MAIL-address for texts and sound/audio creations: gertrude.stein@kunsttot.de

    40. Gertrude Stein
    Collection of Leo and gertrude stein in the studio, 27 rue de Fleurus. Man Ray, gertrude stein and Picasso s Portrait (1922)
    http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~jconte/Gertrude_Stein.html
    English 628 Home Pablo Picasso Tender Buttons World of Stein Bio ... Joseph Conte Home
    Gertrude Stein (1874-1946)
    "Composition as Explanation" (1926)
    The Photographic Record
    Alvin Langdon Coburn (1882-1966), Gertrude Stein Collection of Leo and Gertrude Stein in the studio, 27 rue de Fleurus Man Ray, Gertrude Stein and Picasso's Portrait (1922) Last Revised on Thursday, August 28, 2003

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