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         Literary Criticism & Theory:     more books (100)
  1. Defining Modernism: Baudelaire and Nietzsche on Romanticism, Modernity, Decadence, and Wagner (Studies in Literary Criticism and Theory, V. 8) by Andrea Gogrof-Voorhees, 1999-05
  2. Evolution, History and Destiny: Letters to Alain Locke (1886-1954) and Others (Studies in Literary Criticism and Theory, V. 13.) by Johnny Washington, 2002-12
  3. Text/Countertext: Postmodern Paranoia in Samuel Beckett, Doris Lessing, and Philip Roth (Studies in Literary Criticism and Theory, Vol. 3) by Marie A. Danziger, 1996-11
  4. Gustavo Sainz: Postmodernism in the Mexican Novel (Studies in Literary Criticism and Theory, V. 7.) by Salvador C. Fernandez, 1999-03
  5. Indian Literary Criticism: Theory and Interpretation.(Book Review): An article from: World Literature Today by John Oliver Perry, 2003-04-01
  6. The Quest for Literature: A Survey of Literary Criticism and the Theories of The Literary Forms
  7. Heralds of the Postmodern: Madness and Fiction in Conrad, Woolf, and Lessing (Studies in Literary Criticism and Theory, Vol 4) by Yuan-Jung Cheng, 1999-04
  8. Ecofeminist Literary Criticism: Theory, Interpretation, Pedagogy.(Review) (book review): An article from: The Mississippi Quarterly by F. Waage, 1999-12-22
  9. Perspectives of Four Women Writers on the Second World War: Gertrude Stein, Janet Flanner, Kay Boyle, and Rebecca West (Studies in Literary Criticism and Theory, V. 17.) by Zofia P. Lesinska, 2002-09
  10. Fiction and the Social Contract: Genocide, Pornography, and the Deconstruction of History (Studies in Literary Criticism and Theory, Vol 9) by Larry L. Langford, 1998-06
  11. Postmodern Gaming: Heidegger, Duchamp, Derrida (Studies in Literary Criticism and Theory; Vol.1) by Tilman Kuchler, 1994-05
  12. Modern and Postmodern Strategies: Gaming and the Question of Morality : Adorno, Rorty, Lyotard, and Enzensberger (Studies in Literary Criticism and Theory, V. 11) by Monika Kilian, 1998-09
  13. Literary Texts & the Arts: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (Studies in Literary Criticism and Theory, V. 18)
  14. Hartford Studies in Literature Vol. V 1973 Triple Issue Metapsychological Literary Criticism-Theory and Practice: Essays in Hon by The University Of Hartford, 0000

21. Glossary Of Literary Theory
Glossary of literary theory Index of Primary Entries Socialist Realism Sociological criticism Speech act theory Story / discourse Structuralism
http://www.library.utoronto.ca/utel/glossary/headerindex.html
UTEL History of English English Composition Literary Authors ... Literary Criticism
English Department Sites [ Main Office Graduate Studies Graduate English Association
Glossary of Literary Theory
Index of Primary Entries
A B C D ... I JK L M N O ... P Q R S T U V WX Y Z

22. Wilde, Oscar
Article on Wilde as a literary critic.
http://www.press.jhu.edu/books/hopkins_guide_to_literary_theory/oscar_wilde.html
Wilde, Oscar
Oscar Wilde (1854-1900), an Irishman who was educated at Oxford and lived in London, was a dominant and controversial figure in British cultural life from his undergraduate days until his imprisonment for "acts of gross indecency" in 1895. His views on literature, art, and criticism and their relation to conduct are implicit or explicit in almost everything he wrote and in his public demeanor and his celebrated table talk as well. The scandalous nature of Wilde's peripeteia contributed to a swift and severe reaction against the view of art he represented; and although his reputation has enjoyed a gradual rehabilitation, he is still sometimes narrowly identified with a kind of amoral aestheticism that many people associate, invidiously or not, with a stereotyped conception of male homosexuality. Wilde's habit of expressing himself epigrammatically has made his ideas seem to be essentially clever paradoxes and inversions, designed to amuse and and this has led to a tendency (which Wilde did little enough to discourage) to reduce his critical position to a list of slogans snipped from their contexts: "Life imitates Art" ( Artist 311), "A Truth in art is that whose contradictory is also true" (432), "All art is quite useless" (236).

23. Lit Crit & Theory
literary criticism theory General/Miscellaneous Rhetorical criticism Wayne Booth (Glossary of literary theory); The Forest of Rhetoric incl.
http://www.usd.edu/~tgannon/crit.html
TCG's Literary Criticism
Critical Theory Page
A POSTMODERN Vocabulary
Representative theorists for each "school" are also listed, withoften philosophicalprecursors (in parentheses) and [pre-20th-century precursors in square brackets]. Some of the categories probably have few links at this point, and the descriptions/explanations of each type are still in the planning/rough-draft stage. For now, the page is more an interesting skeleton of an outlinewith even its bones subjectively joined, no doubt, and its flesh relatively meagre. Still, the outline is what I'm most proud of, anyway, because, while I'm at present an almost-PH.D. (ABD"all but dead"!) in English at the U of Iowa, I still think, sometimes, that my true calling was "obsessive-compulsive librarian." . . . Finally, some "links," commentary, etc., are my own bad jokes [
REVISION NOTE (01/02) : I've finally got some decent links together, in addition to brief introductions to the various "schools": however, these latter, are, in large measure (and necessarily), my own misreadings/misprisions of each, of course. (To spell out my own biases, I spent many years [thru my M.A.] comfortably "doing" Jungian [and to a lesser extent, Freudian] criticism. A return for my Ph.D. led me to poststructuralist forms of psychoanalytical theory and to gasp ecocriticism.) As another caveat, the lists of "representative" critics are as much "random samples" culled from memory and my own arbitrary reading emphases as they are the most truly "important" figures in their field. (Many listings of representative scholars have now also been supplemented by brief

24. Welcome To Gender Inn
Searchable database of information on feminist theory, feminist literary criticism, and gender studies, with a focus on English and American literature. Available in English and German.
http://www.uni-koeln.de/phil-fak/englisch/datenbank/e_index.htm

German Version
FAQ Bibliographies Weblinks ... Start
Dear Visitor,
Welcome to gender Inn , the Women's and Gender Studies Database on the Internet. gender Inn is a searchable database providing access to over 8,400 records pertaining to feminist theory, feminist literary criticism and gender studies focusing on English and American literature. gender Inn is continually updated. All records are carefully indexed using a feminist search index. The complete database is available in both English and German If you want to complete your research by checking other resources, make sure to check our annotated list of gender and women's studies weblinks Furthermore we are offering a selection of bibliographies on some areas of Women's and Gender Studies. For further information about the database's history and background, as well as it's structure and content, please read our FAQs We hope that you'll enjoy your visit at gender Inn
Drop in any time again!
Englisches Seminar
Abteilung Neumeier
Albertus-Magnus-Platz
Tel. ++49 - (0)221-470-3030
Fax ++49 - (0)221-470-6931
e-Mail: database-genderinn@uni-koeln.de

25. USD - Literary Criticism And Theory
literary criticism and theory. The John Hopkins Guide to literary theory and criticism SubStance A Review of theory and literary criticism
http://www.usd.edu/engl/litcrit.cfm
search
site people USD A to Z

26. Index
Annotated list of internet resources for women's literature, maintained by the Women's Studies Department at Northern Arizona University. Subcategories include African, AsianPacific, Australian-New Zealand, literary Biography and literary History, Comparative Literature, Creative Writing, European, General, Genre Fiction,Latin American-Caribbean, Middle Eastern, NarrativeTheories and Studies of, North American, Poetry and Poetics, literary theory and criticism
http://www.nau.edu/~wst/access/hotlist/lithot.html
PROGRAM INFORMATION:
Why Women's Studies?

Program Information and Faculty

Major and Minor in Women's Studies

Graduate Certificate

COURSE OFFERINGS:
Current Course Offerings

Next Semester's Courses

Past Semesters' Courses

Course Descriptions
...
Women's Studies links
The Women's Studies Program is located in the Ashurst Building (Bldg 11), Room 101. The part-time faculty office is in Ashurst 102. Ashurst is on North Campus, next to Old Main. Mailing Address: Women's Studies Program Box 5695 Northern Arizona University Flagstaff, AZ 86011 Phone: Fax: Email: Womens.Studies@NAU.EDU
Email questions or comments regarding the site to Womens.Studies@nau.edu Site by Cynthia Anne Simmons.Teri Dillion, Ben Wyss and Kelli Holloran ©Northern Arizona University, Women's Studies Department, 2005.

27. Literary Criticism/Literary Theory
The differences between literary criticism, literary theory and theory itself This is literary criticism in that it is a valuation of the writing and
http://www.brocku.ca/english/courses/4F70/crit.vs.theory.html
Department of English Brock University
The differences between Literary Criticism,
Literary Theory and 'theory itself'
John Lye 1998. Prepared for my ENGL 4F70, Contemporary Literary Theory , course. Comments welcome, e-mail me at jlye@brocku.ca
I: 'Literary criticism
Literary criticism is fundamentally the estimation of the value of a particular work or body of work on such grounds as: the personal and/or cultural significance of the themes and the uses of language of a text; the insights and impact of a text; and the aesthetic production (or, performance) of the text; particularly as these areas are seen to be mutually dependent, supportive or inflective. The word 'criticism' has ordinary-use negative connotations, and to an extent that is right: for literary criticism is part of the disciplining of discourse generally and of what is considered literature in particular. One patrols the boundaries of good writing, admitting or excluding, determining what should be thought about a text, and why, what personal and cultural value should be placed on it. Judgments of value are not simple, however. They require that one consider what constitutes value, what the personal and social value of literature is, what the value of 'the aesthetic' is. And they require that one interpret the text. As texts judged to be of high literary value tend to be marked by complexity and even ambiguity, and to yield diverse interpretations, judgment may ultimately require a theory of interpretation, or at least careful attention to the question of what constitutes, guides, and legitimates interpretation.

28. ENGL 4F70 Home Page
CONTEMPORARY literary theory. Department of English, Brock University The John Hopkins Guide to literary theory and criticism (limited access)
http://www.brocku.ca/english/courses/4F70/
CONTEMPORARY LITERARY THEORY
Department of English Brock University
Professor John Lye
Please note that I am not teaching ENGL 4F70 this year. I will however be maintaining my pages, and will be teaching ENGL 4P71, Contemporary Theoretical Approaches Material on Theory by John Lye Links to other Theory pages
General Theory
Some characteristics of contemporary theory
Contemporary Literary Theory (article)
A checklist of theoretical concerns
Some Factors Affecting/Effecting the Reading of Texts
The differences between Literary Criticism, Literary Theory, and 'theory itself'
The Problem of Meaning
Structuralism
Elements of Structuralism
Jakobson's Communication Model
Summary of Genette, "Structuralism and Literary Criticism"
Reader-Response
The Interpretive Turn (from my COMM 2F50 site)
Some Principles of Phenomenological Hermeneutics
Reader-Response: Various Positions
Poststructuralism, including Deconstruction
Some Poststructuralist Assumptions
An Essay on Barthes' "From Work to Text" by Lisa Smith
Deconstruction: Some Assumptions
Synopsis of J. Hillis Miller, "The Critic as Host"
Examples of deconstructive reading by J. Lye:
The 'death of the author' as an instance of theory
Critical Theories
Brief ideology page
Some Issues in Postcolonial Theory
An Ideological Reading of "Aunt Jennifer's Tigers"
Bakhtin on Language ...
A summary of Foucault, "The Discourse on Language"

29. Literary Theory. Literary Criticism
literary theory, literary criticism, theoreticians, literary theoreticians. A web directory.
http://www.zeroland.co.nz/literary_theory.html
Film Music Literature Philosophy ... E-Texts
Literary Theory and Criticism
A Web Directory Web www.zeroland.co.nz Literary Theory, Literary Criticism . A Web Index
Semiotics
Deconstruction , Structuralism, Postmodernism
Critics and Theoreticians
, Media Theory, Gender Studies
A Web Directory
See also: Literary Journals Philosophy
A - C D - E F - G M - R S - ... V - Z
A Alternative Press Center. An index of alternative magazines, journals, online resources. Alternative viewpoints from around the world. Searchable under subject, name, author.
the Arts Tri-quarterly, UK

Aristotle's
Poetics. ... Articles from Google Scholar. Search specifically for scholarly literature, including peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, preprints, abstracts and technical reports from all broad areas of research. B Bibliography of literary criticism and theory. C Cambridge History of English and American Literature. Online version. of the encyclopedia in 14 volumes. Carpe, a German art and literary magazine. Comparative Literature and Theory, Eclat; a web directory from The University of Pennsylvania. ... Cyberspace and Critical Theory (from Brown University). Deconstruction Deconstruction: A school of philosophy that originated in France in the late 1960s, has had an enormous impact on Anglo-American criticism. Largely the creation of its chief proponent Jacques Derrida, deconstruction upends the Western metaphysical tradition.

30. Hermeneutics: 2. Twentieth Century
Hermeneutics in the Twentieth Century in The Johns Hopkins Guide to literary theory and criticism
http://www.press.jhu.edu/books/hopkins_guide_to_literary_theory/hermeneutics-_2.
Hermeneutics
2. Twentieth Century
In the twentieth century, the central innovation in hermeneutics is associated with the work of Martin Heidegger (1889-1976) and his student Hans-Georg Gadamer (b. 1900). The general shift they advocated can be summarized in three areas. First, in contrast to the tradition since at least the Enlightenment, hermeneutics no longer concerns itself exclusively with the understanding and interpretation of written documents or speech. Second, unlike in Romantic hermeneutic theory from Friedrich Schleiermacher to Wilhelm Dilthey, the aim of understanding is not focused on the communication with or the psychology of another person. Third, the hermeneutics of Heidegger and Gadamer explores a realm that is prior to or more fundamental than Dilthey's separation of the natural sciences from the human sciences. Twentieth-century hermeneutics takes leave of the epistemological arena in which previous theories of understanding operated and moves into the area of "fundamental ontology," to use Heidegger's phrase. This means that understanding is not to be conceived transitively; we are not concerned with understanding something. Rather understanding is grasped as our way of being-in-the-world, as the fundamental way we exist prior to any cognition or intellectual activity. Ontological hermeneutics thus replaces the question of understanding as knowledge about the world with the question of being-in-the-world.
Heidegger's essential contribution to hermeneutic theory occurs in

31. VoS - Voice Of The Shuttle
A directory of links to literary criticism and analysis on the Internet, mostly scholarly.
http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse.asp?id=2718

32. Introduction To Modern Literary Theory
The Johns Hopkins Guide to literary theory and criticism / edited by Michael and Martin Kreiswirth. Baltimore Johns Hopkins UP, 1994; Guerin, Wilfred L. et
http://www.kristisiegel.com/theory.htm
Dr. Kristi Siegel
Associate Professor, English Dept.
Chair - Languages, Literature, and Communication Division
(414) 258-4810, ext. 395
siegelkr@core.com
Introduction to Modern Literary Theory Literary Trends and Influences* Please note : Site is in the process of being updated and expanded - July 2005.
    Links to Critical/Theoretical Approaches: New Criticism A literary movement that started in the late 1920s and 1930s and originated in reaction to traditional criticism that new critics saw as largely concerned with matters extraneous to the text, e.g., with the biography or psychology of the author or the work's relationship to literary history. New Criticism proposed that a work of literary art should be regarded as autonomous, and so should not be judged by reference to considerations beyond itself. A poem consists less of a series of referential and verifiable statements about the 'real' world beyond it, than of the presentation and sophisticated organization of a set of complex experiences in a verbal form (Hawkes, pp. 150-151).

33. Post-Modern Critical Theory
Overviews of the new criticism and formalism, traditional historicism, new historicism, readerresponse criticism, psychoanalytical criticism, feminist literary criticism, structuralist criticism, and Marxist literary criticism.
http://www.assumption.edu/users/ady/HHGateway/Gateway/Approaches.html
Approaches to Reading and Interpretation
New Criticism/Formalism
Traditional Historicism
New Historicism
Reader-Response Criticism ... Old Historicism MIMETIC APPROACH EXPRESSIVE APPROACH TEXT OBJECTIVE APPROACH PRAGMATIC APPROACH Writer Reader Biographical Criticism New Criticism Reader-Response Criticism Aristotle Some Psych. critics
New Criticism/Formalism
  • Examples of New Critical Approach
  • Historical Background
    • New Criticism arose in opposition to biographical or vaguely impressionistic approaches
    • It sought to establish literary studies as an objective discipline
    • Its desire to reveal organic unity in complex texts may be historically determined, reflective of early 20th century critics seeking a lost order or in conflict with an increasingly fragmented society
  • Assumptions
    • Texts possess meaning in and of themselves; therefore, analyses should emphasize intrinsic meaning over extrinsic meaning ( verbal sense over significance in E.D. Hirsch's view)

34. New Criticism
University project on this school of literary theory.
http://www.lawrence.edu/dept/english/courses/60A/newcrit.html
1993 HYPERTEXT DATABASE: NEW CRITICISM These materials were created by students back in 1993 as part of an early experiment with hypertext. They were designed to serve as a kind of online reference tool, an electronic database, that would provide information to students who weren't taking English 60A. The authors of these materials were Chris Abele, Liz Cronmiller, Allison DeZurik, Josh Hudson, Diana Marinos, Matt Ogborn, and Tamara Pellicier. If they ever visit this site, I hope they'll drop me a line. Table of Contents Introduction New Criticism is an approach to literature which was developed by a group of American critics, most of whom taught at southern universities during the years following the first World War. The New Critics wanted to avoid impressionistic criticism , which risked being shallow and arbitrary, and social/ historical approaches which might easily be subsumed by other disciplines. Thus, they attempted to systematize the study of literature, to develop an approach which was centered on the rigorous study of the text itself. They were given their name by John Crowe Ransom, who describes the new American formalists in The New Criticism New Critical formalism New Criticism is distinctly formalist in character . It stresses close attention to the internal characteristics of the text itself, and it discourages the use of external evidence to explain the work. The method of New Criticism is foremost a close reading, concentrating on such formal aspects as rhythm, meter, theme, imagery, metaphor, etc. The interpretation of a text shows that these aspects serve to support the structure of meaning within the text.

35. Litcrit Theory
In this section on the responses of literary theory and criticism, we will explore some of the significant discussions that have taken place since 1970 on
http://www.iath.virginia.edu/holocaust/litcrittheo.html
Literary Criticism and Theory
Robert S. Leventhal
Department of German
University of Virginia
In this section on the responses of Literary Theory and Criticism, we will explore some of the significant discussions that have taken place since 1970 on the topic of literary representation and interpretation of Holocaust literature. One of the earliest contributions to this topic was Lawrence L. Langer's The Holocaust and the Literary Imagination (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1979), a book that dealt with the major genres of Holocaust literature and many of the intepretive questions that inevitably arise when dealing with this body of literature. Of particular importance is Langer's treatment of the various responses inherent within literary modernity. The fundamental question that arises is: is the function of literature to "represent" the Holocaust? If so, how can literature represent "extreme" events, catastrophic events such as the Nazi Genocide of the Jews? Regarding the reception of literature, the question is posed as to whether the "aesthetic" response of the reader is even legitimate at all given the atrocity of Auschwitz. This question, and all that it entails, was raised in a most provocative manner by the German philosopher Theodor W. Adorno

36. English 510
English 510 (Spring1997) literary criticism and theory Nietzsche to Anzaldua. This course examines the history of literary theory and criticism from the
http://www.unm.edu/~garyh/courses/510.html
English 510:
Literary Criticism and Theory
Gary Harrison
Director of Graduate Studies
Department of English
University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131

garyh@unm.edu
"Information devours its own content. It devours communication and the social." Jean Baudrillard
English 510 (Spring1997) Literary Criticism and Theory: Nietzsche to Anzaldua
This course examines the history of literary theory and criticism from the late nineteenth century to the present. As we map significant changes in criticism and theory, we will also attend to the formation of literary criticism and theory as an institutional practice. Requirements : You must write three papers of about 7 to 10 pages (1750 - 2500 words) and present a concise but comprehensive 15-minute presentation on one of the topics listed in the syllabus. Papers Presentation . Each presentation should place the particular critic, theorist or school into its historical, cultural context and outline the general ideas, major contributions, general intellectual trends that each represents. When longer works are assigned, for example, Levi Strauss's Tristes Tropiques, I expect you to engage only a portion of the workthat which is most pertinent to our discussion. You should should see me during office hours for guidance as you prepare your presentation. Required Texts : Richter, David. The Critical Tradition. New York: St Martin's, 1989. Photocopies are on two-hour reserve at Zimmerman Library. See the reserve list for books on three-day reserve; your papers should demonstrate familiarity with the works on reserve that are most pertinent to your topic.

37. Literary Criticism & THEORY
literary criticism theory. Internet Public Library Online literary criticism Collection The John Hopkins Guide to literary theory criticism
http://www.unm.edu/~exa10/literary_criticism__theory.htm
Please report broken links Back to Literary Links Internet Public Library Online Literary Criticism Collection www.theory.org.uk
POST-COLONIALISM Some Issues in Postcolonial Theory Postcolonial Theory and the Bible Cultural Imperialism includes links discussing “cultural imperialism”—the domination of other cultures by products of the U.S. culture industry. And it contains links to sources of resistance to this process, including popular culture(s) produced in various countries around the world.
CULTURAL STUDIES
PopPolitics Popular Culture: Resources for Critical Analysis
POSTMODERNISM Writing, General Knowledge, and Postmodern Anthropology by Paul Smith Anthro.NetPostmodern Anthropology
GENDER STUDIES AND QUEER THEORY Gender Roles The Places of Feminist Criticism by Kim Anne Savelson
INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES Medical Humanities

38. Criticism And Theory
A directory of criticism and theory links. Narrative theory literary criticism A huge range of literary theory and criticism resources.
http://www.writers.net/resources/resources_criticism.php
writers.net Writers - Published Writers - Unpublished Literary Agents Editors Publishers Resources Log in Join WritersNet
Browse our range of criticism and theory links especially for the studious author!
NB: Links were correct and working at time of publishing. WritersNet accepts no responsibility for dead links.
Background Materials: Formalist and Structuralist Ideas
These are notes on critical theory that provided as background for students in classes at Brock University. They are not definitive interpretations, and sometimes oversimplify, but they are intended to provide some definitions for students.
DeVry Online Writing Support Center

The emphasis at this site is writing for the internet, including email and composition for the web.
Editorial Department

One sure sign of change in the publishing business is that many literary agents and acquiring editors today expect manuscripts to be professionally edited prior to submission. The Editorial Department provides professional editing for both newcomers and published authors of fiction and non-fiction. Feminist Literary Criticism and Theory
This page includes information on different literary genres, specific historical Periods, pedagogical issues, politics and literature, and literary theory.

39. Literary Criticism: Glossary, Shakespeare, Contemporary, Theory - LibrarySpot.co
Explore literary criticism resources online at LibrarySpot.com.
http://www.libraryspot.com/features/litcritfeature.htm

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Studying literary criticism can be a great way to learn more about an author or delve deeper into a work. Literary criticism describes, analyzes or interprets a literary work, usually in essay form.
If you're just curious to learn more about an author or work, online resources may suffice. But if you're working on an academic paper, you'll probably need to go further. The Web can get you started, but your local school or library will probably be your best resource.
Where to Start

40. CRITICISM AND THEORY
Introduction to literary criticism summaries of some of the major figures in literary literary and Critical theory Literature, Cognition the Brain
http://www.cannylink.com/bookscriticism.htm
Web www.CannyLink.com
Criticism and Theory
  • Calls for Papers (UPenn English Dept. Gopher) CogWeb: Cognitive Cultural Studies - scholarly site devoted to the exploration of the relevance of the study of human cognition to literary and cultural studies, and to the development of cognitive culture theory. Critical Theory - aesthetics, art, design, critical theory and various links. Introduction to Literary Criticism - summaries of some of the major figures in Literary Criticism/Critical Theory. Journal x: A Journal in Culture and Criticism - publishes critical essays on aspects of English and American literary and cultural studies. Literary and Critical Theory - research at the intersection of literary studies, cognitive theory, and neuroscience. Includes annotated bibliography, reviews, abstracts, features, and work in progress. Postmodernism and Literary Criticism and Theory Discussion - a message board devoted to discussing deconstructionism, postmodernism, and literary criticism and theory. Indices - Voice of the Shuttle: Literary Theory Page
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