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         Stein Gertrude:     more books (100)
  1. Gertrude Stein by Avis Burnett, 1972
  2. Gertrude Stein Gertrude Stein Gertrude Stein by Marty. (Carroll, Pat) Martin, 1980
  3. Irresistible Dictation: Gertrude Stein and the Correlations of Writing and Science (Writing Science) by Steven Meyer, 2002-08-01
  4. Mexico: A Play by Gertrude Stein, 2000-04-01
  5. Matisse Picasso and Gertrude Stein: With Two Shorter Stories by Gertrude Stein, 2007-02-08
  6. Einstein, Gertrude Stein, Wittgenstein by John Brockman, 1986-03-04
  7. The Gertrude Stein Reader: The Great American Pioneer of Avant-Garde Letters by Richard Kostelanetz, 2002-11-25
  8. Walks in Gertrude Stein's Paris by Mary Ellen Haight, 1988-03
  9. Picasso and Gertrude Stein (Metropolitan Museum of Art Publications) by Vincent Giroud, 2007-01-16
  10. Reflection on the Atomic Bomb (The Previously Uncollected Writings of Gertrude Stein, Volume I) by Gertrude Stein, 1973-01-01
  11. Narration: Four Lectures by Gertrude Stein, 2010-05-01
  12. Really Reading Gertrude Stein: A Selected Anthology With Essays by Judy Grahn by Judy Grahn, 1990-01
  13. Narration: Four Lectures by Gertrude Stein, 2010-05-01
  14. Really Reading Gertrude Stein: A Selected Anthology With Essays by Judy Grahn by Judy Grahn, 1990-01

41. The Metropolitan Museum Of Art, New York
gertrude stein, Pablo Picasso, 1906, 47.106. The Figure 5 in Gold, Charles Demuth, 1928, 49.59.1. The Garden of Love (Improvisation Number 27)
http://www.metmuseum.org/Works_of_Art/viewHigh.asp?dep=21&viewmode=0

42. PICASSO: "Portrait Of Gertrude Stein"
Picasso Portrait of gertrude stein . To Next Image Bather Back to Picasso Page Back to Artists Page Back to Site Map
http://www.mala.bc.ca/~lanes/english/hemngway/picasso/steinpor.htm
Picasso: "Portrait of Gertrude Stein"
To Next Image: "Bather"
Back to Picasso Page

Back to Artists Page

43. Untitled Document
gertrude stein recalls a composition of hers being chosen by her teacher at Franklin School to be posted on the wall, and this may have been the germ of her
http://www.cateweb.org/CA_Authors/stein.html
G ertrude Stein (1874-1946)
by Janice Albert Picasso's 1906 portrait of Gertrude Stein hangs in the Museum of Modern
Art, New York City.
were to stop speaking French and German, and instead concentrate on their English, which he wanted to be flawless. Gertrude Stein recalls a composition of hers being chosen by her teacher at Franklin School to be posted on the wall, and this may have been the germ of her sense of herself as a writer. She followed her brother Leo to Massachusetts and enrolled at Radcliff, met the philosopher William James, started toward a degree in medicine, and then abruptly withdrew. After a period of restlessness and travel, at the age of 29, she settled with brother Leo in Paris, where she lived the rest of her life.
In the thirties, her inherited income began to fail, and she was persuaded to write The Autobiography of Alice B. Gertrude Atherton The death of Stein's parents in Oakland caused Gertrude to leave the
West Coast.

44. IPL Online Literary Criticism Collection
There are no biographical sites about gertrude stein in the collection; do you know of any Use these links to search for gertrude stein outside the IPL.
http://www.ipl.org/div/litcrit/bin/litcrit.out.pl?au=ste-168

45. Heroine Worship: Gertrude Stein, The Salonkeeper
But we do not remember gertrude stein for saying any of these outrageous things. As a writer she is defined for us by only four quotations egoless catch
http://www.nytimes.com/specials/magazine4/articles/stein.html
Gertrude Stein / By Cynthia Ozick
The Salonkeeper
Forums: Discuss Gertrude Stein and other emblematic women in the forums. hat is the difference between a literary icon and an ordinary writer? The writer is sometimes read, the icon almost never; a symbol is independent of readers. The writer transfigured into symbol leaves behind such earthbound circumstances as reputation, controversy, acclaim, fame - even the highest degree of fame. All these are swallowed up in the Representation of an Era. Consider those 60's luminaries (they are all male) who have come to personify - indelibly and incontrovertibly - one liberating image after another: the mystical vagabond, the Whitman-esque bard, the macho rebel, the generational clown, the soused ex-prodigy. Of their celebrated passions, only a handful of stray phrases and shock-worthy gestures survive. They have ascended - or fallen - into legend.
Gertrude Stein, 1945.

46. (Bruce Andrews)
October 2001; text presented at the gertrude stein Symposium organized by Bevya Rosten, New York City. Indented italicized lines are stein s,
http://www.pores.bbk.ac.uk/3/andrews.html
PORES 3 Main Index Bruce Andrews cris cheek Adrian Clarke Johan de Wit Allen Fisher ... Exit
Bruce Andrews
Reading Language, Reading Gertrude Stein
[October 2001; text presented at the Gertrude Stein Symposium organized by Bevya Rosten, New York City. Indented italicized lines are Stein's, from 1913-1923, taken from Ulla Dydo, ed., A Stein Reader (Northwestern University Press, 1993)] A language tries to be free. Reading.
To think it through from the extremes or the exceptions, what better place to start than with Gertrude Stein.
The words don't take the place of a prior reality. Material insistence triumphs, slipping and sliding beneath the sign. Length what is length when silence is so windowful. When no systematizing translation of the force of words back into their signifying prison-house is very likely.
Language is often considered exclusively mediating, ruled by conventional signs. But in reading Stein, the idealism of the sign can't recuperate these energies. I have resisted. I have resisted that excellently well. Signs usually stabilized by customary use get shaken up by a materiality that miniaturizes its possible uses.

47. Portrait Of Gertrude Stein
Title Portrait of gertrude stein Date 1906. Location of Origin France Medium Oil on canvas Style Cubism Genre Portrait.
http://www.usc.edu/schools/annenberg/asc/projects/comm544/library/images/257.htm
Portrait of Gertrude Stein
Artist: Pablo Picasso
Artist's Lifespan:
Title:
Portrait of Gertrude Stein
Date:
Location of Origin:
France
Medium: Oil on canvas
Style: Cubism
Genre: Portrait

48. The Happiness Project: This Saturday: A Happiness Quotation From Gertrude Stein.
gertrude stein. * I ve found that for me, outer order brings inner serenity, Ah, gertrude stein! That quote really is a prescription for happiness.
http://www.happiness-project.com/happiness_project/2008/01/this-saturday-1.html
The Happiness Project
I'm working on a book, THE HAPPINESS PROJECTa memoir about the year I spent test-driving every principle, tip, theory, and scientific study I could find, whether from Aristotle or St. Therese or Martin Seligman or Oprah. THE HAPPINESS PROJECT will gather these rules for living and report on what works and what doesn’t. On this daily blog, I recount some of my adventures and insights as I grapple with the challenge of being happier. THE HAPPINESS PROJECT will hit the shelves in late 2009 (HarperCollins).
About
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My Twelve Commandments
  • 1. Be Gretchen. 2. Let it go. 3. Act as I would feel. 4. Do it now. 5. Be polite and be fair. 6. Enjoy the process. 7. Spend out. 8. Identify the problem. 9. Lighten up. 10. Do what ought to be done. 11. No calculation. 12. There is only love.
If you'd like a copy of my resolutions chart
  • Just drop me an email. The first part is grubin (then that familiar symbol). The second part is gretchenrubin (then a period, then a com). Sorry to be convolutedbecause of spam.
Every Wednesday is Tip Day.

49. Stein's Picasso Poem
IF I TOLD HIM. A Completed Portrait of Picasso. gertrude stein. (Hear stein read this poem). If I told him would he like it. Would he like it if I told him.
http://www.english.upenn.edu/~jenglish/Courses/Spring02/104/steinpicasso.html
IF I TOLD HIM
A Completed Portrait of Picasso
Gertrude Stein Hear Stein read this poem
If I told him would he like it. Would he like it if I told him.
Would he like it would Napoleon would Napoleon would would he like it.
If Napoleon if I told him if I told him if Napoleon. Would he like it if I told him if I told him if Napoleon. Would he like it if Napoleon if
Napoleon if I told him. If I told him if Napoleon if Napoleon if I told him. If I told him would he like it would he like it if I told him.
Now.
Not now.
And now.
Now.
Exactly as as kings.
Feeling full for it. Exactitude as kings. So to beseech you as full as for it. Exactly or as kings. Shutters shut and open so do queens. Shutters shut and shutters and so shutters shut and shutters and so and so shutters and so shutters shut and so shutters shut and shutters and so. And so shutters shut and so and also. And also and so and so and also. Exact resemblance to exact resemblance the exact resemblance as exact as a resemblance, exactly as resembling, exactly resembling, exactly in resemblance exactly a resemblance, exactly and resemblance. For this is so. Because.

50. Today In History: July 27
On July 27, 1946, American avantgarde writer and art connoisseur gertrude stein died in France. Her longtime companion, Alice B. Toklas, was at her side.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/today/jul27.html
@import url(../css/am15_global_ss.css); @import url(ss/tih1_ss.css);
  • Search all collections
Today in History
The Library of Congress American Memory Home Today in History
Today in History: July 27
sources archives yesterday tomorrow
Cyrus Eidlitz, Architect
New York, N.Y., Times Building Under Construction
photographic negative, ca. 1903.
Touring Turn-of-the-Century America: Photographs from the Detroit Publishing Company, 1880-1920

Times Building, Times Square

Samuel H. Gottscho, photographer,
photographic negative, 1962.
Architecture and Interior Design for 20th Century America: Photographs by Samuel Gottscho and William Schleisner, 1935-1955
Architect Cyrus Lazelle Warner Eidlitz was born on July 27 , 1853, in New York, New York. His father, Prague-born architect Leopold Eidlitz, was an influential theorist who became a founding member of the American Institute of Architects in 1857. Educated in New York and Europe, the younger Eidlitz is known for designing numerous public buildings, including Chicago's Dearborn Station and the Buffalo Public Library . Cyrus Eidlitz's work, like that of his father, was especially influenced by Gothic and Romanesque revival styles of the second half of the nineteenth century.

51. Gertrude Stein News - The New York Times
News about gertrude stein. Commentary and archival information about gertrude stein from The New York Times.
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/s/gertrude_stein/inde

52. Money And Literature: Gertrude Stein
It should be no surprise that one can write productively about gertrude stein s writings in terms of money. Born into wealth, she spent her own money to
http://www.notbored.org/gertrude-stein.html
Gertrude Stein's Difficult Paper
It should be no surprise that one can write productively about Gertrude Stein's writings in terms of money. Born into wealth, she spent her own money to publish her many books; when necessary, she sold off paintings that she'd been given or had purchased to finance further publishing ventures. And when she became famous in France, after the end of World War II, and was asked for her autograph, she'd sign her name on a paper banknote. And yet few of her readers or critics have used money to read and understand her notoriously difficult texts. Most have preferred to describe and praise them by citing their supposed similarity to modernist musical compositions or Cubist paintings. But these approaches encounter two problems: 1) though non-verbal, both musical compositions and paintings can be "about" something, that is to say, can refer to or even include objects, meanings or actions that are other or different from their own; and 2) Stein herself was a forceful and determined critic of all forms of supposed similitude and sameness, especially the idea that women are the same as and "like" men. Let us take as our first example Stein's celebrated coinage, "A rose is a rose is a rose is a rose," which she originally made in 1913 and repeated in "Lifting Belly," which was written between 1915 and 1917. Taken from Shakespeare's famous claim that "a rose by any other name would smell just as sweet," Stein's version is often understood as a child-like but poetic playing with words, in particular, with nouns. Stein herself can be cited as support for this understanding. In "Poetry and Grammar," written around 1930, she explained that

53. Gertrude And Alice: On Our Way!
There is no shortage of information online about gertrude stein and Alice B. Toklas. Whether there are specific web sites devoted to one or both or sites
http://www.gertrudeandalice.com/
There is no shortage of information online about Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas. The primary purpose of gertrudeandalice.com is to provide a site which recognizes the importance of this almost four-decade long partnership. Much of what Gertrude Stein accomplished could not have been done without Alice B. Toklas. Much of what Alice B. Toklas accomplished could not have been done without Gertrude Stein. Stein has received much deserved recognition and analysis over the years while Toklas has received some, but too little of either. Often her claim to fame is couched in the mythology of the hashish fudge recipe! Plans are underway to coordinate a series of events around the world for a celebration in 2007 called GertrudeandAlice: 100 Years, 100 Roses On Our Way GertrudeandAlice
Will Receive You On
She Said She Said
He Said He Said
... Gallery

54. Lost Generation --  Britannica Student Encyclopaedia
The term comes from gertrude stein s remark to fellow author Ernest Hemingway, “You are all a lost generation.” Hemingway used stein s remark to introduce
http://student.britannica.com/ebi/article-9312229
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Research: Journals And Magazines The Web's Best Sites Hemingway used Stein's remark to introduce his 1926 novel The Sun Also Rises
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55. Gertrude Stein (1874 - 1946) - Find A Grave Memorial
Search Amazon for gertrude stein. Burial Cimetière du Père Lachaise Paris, France Remembering you 61 years later gertrude Nancy Added 7/29/2007
http://www.findagrave.com/pictures/977.html

56. The Last Act - The New York Review Of Books
Janet Malcolm begins her remarkable work on gertrude stein and Alice B. Toklas by recalling how, half a century or so ago, like many other pretentious young
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/20690
Home Your account Current issue Archives ...
October 25, 2007
The Last Act
By Michael Kimmelman
Two Lives: Gertrude and Alice by Janet Malcolm Yale University Press, 240 pp., $25.00 Janet Malcolm begins her remarkable work on Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas by recalling how, half a century or so ago, like many other pretentious young Americans feeling hemmed in by Eisenhower-era conformity, she gravitated to Toklas's cookbook. Its carefree, worldly snobbishness "fit right in with our program of callow preciousness," she writes. "We loved its waspishly magisterial tone, its hauteur and malice." Years later, coming again upon her old food-stained copy, she reads the chapter about life under the Nazis, which she hadn't read before. Toklas recalls how she and Stein hid in an area of provincial eastern France called Bugey, where they kept a house in the town of Bilignin, discovered one summer day in 1924 on the way to visit Picasso. When the war broke out, they wheedled a military pass and drove to Paris, fetched winter clothes, then settled back in the countryside for the duration. Toklas's tone is cheerful. Malcolm, who has made a career of not taking writers at their word, asks herself what Toklas must be hiding. Two Jewish Americans in occupied France, and she is reminiscing about "Restricted Veal Loaf"? Why no mention of their Jewishness, "never mind [their] lesbianism," she asks. And so begins a rich meditation, born from articles in

57. Download Stein Song
MP3 file download of gertrude stein s rendition of An Completed Portrait of Picasso with a rap beat background.
http://eceserv0.ece.wisc.edu/~sethares/mp3s/steinsong.html
An Incomplete Portrait of Gertrude Stein Always one of my favorite poets, Gertrude Stein's rendition of A Completed Portrait of Picasso was the highlight (for me) of the CD collection 100 Years of Poetry . It sounded to me like Gertrude Stein was rapping out an infectious groove with her incessant "Now, not Now, and Now". It wasn't long before I tried to complete a portrait, this time of Stein, and this time using a rhythmic motif based in a scale consisting of seven equal divisions of the octave. Link here for the All Stein All the Time web page... is 3:05 long and about 2.8 Megs (in mp3 format). Download now. Looking for Bill's other music? There's plenty more weird (alternately tuned) stuff , and also a bunch of "normal" stuff

58. Vanderbilt University Press - Books
gertrude stein and the Essence of What Happens Dana Cairns Watson A lively study of gertrude stein’s fascination with conversation.
http://www.vanderbiltuniversitypress.com/bookdetail.asp?book_id=3835

59. Literary Encyclopedia: Gertrude Stein
The vast majority of studies about gertrude stein begin by announcing the curious fact that she is primarily notable as a personality, celebrity or icon and
http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=4206

60. GayHeroes.com: Gertrude Stein
Who was gertrude stein? Everybody s heard of her. She s the most famous lesbian in the world. Gertude stein and Alice B. Toklas are the most famous lesbian
http://www.gayheroes.com/gertrude.htm
GayHeroes.com: Gay and Lesbian People in History Gertrude Stein
Who was Gertrude Stein? Everybody's heard of her. She's the most famous lesbian in the world. Gertude Stein and Alice B. Toklas are the most famous lesbian couple ever, well, until maybe Ellen and Anne. Everyone knows Gertrude Stein was a writer; she wrote "a rose is a rose is a rose". But has anyone ever read anything else she ever wrote? Paris, in the Roaring '20s
The apartment of Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas was the most famous artistic and literary hangout in Europe. Gertrude Stein was THE arbiter of artistic taste whose offhand remark could make or break an artist's reputation. Geniuses like Pablo Picasso and Ernest Hemmingway would come to talk with Gertrude Stein, while their wives sat with Alice B. Toklas.
"Before I decided to write this book My Twenty-Five Years With Gertrude Stein, I had often said that I would write, The Wives of Geniuses I Have Sat With. I have sat with so many. I have sat with wives that were not wives, of geniuses who were real geniuses. I have sat with real wives of geniuses who were not real geniuses. I have sat with wives of geniuses, of near-geniuses, of would-be geniuses, in short I have sat very often and very long with many wives and wives of many geniuses.

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