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Marie Huber

Marie Huber (4 March 1695 – 13 June 1753) was a Genevan writer on theology and related subjects, as well as a translator and editor, at a time when it was rare for a female writer to write about theology.

Huber was a proponent of universalism, and was considered by some a deist. Her ''Letters Concerning the Religion Essential to Man'' (1761) are known to have been read, in translation, by Robert Burns.

She was one of 15 children, and was the great-aunt of François Huber, the naturalist. Provided by Wikipedia
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Published 2017
Memories of an impossible future : Mehdi Akhavan Sales and the poetics of time /

: In Memories of an Impossible Future: Mehdi Akhavān Sāles and the Poetics of Time Marie Huber traces the quest for a modern language of poetry through different figurations of temporality in the works of one of Iran's foremost poets. Akhavān is placed in dialogue with European thinkers and emerges as an original voice in world literature. Chapters examine aspects of rhythm and metaphor, messianism and historicity, and functions of time in Akhavān's lyric and epic poems. Through a range of close readings Huber seeks to understand Akhavān's texts as crystallisations of a historical moment, both rooted in the Persian tradition and pointing beyond it. Her analyses combine attention to philological detail with meditations on the philosophical significance of Akhavān's poetics.
: 1 online resource (185 pages) : Includes bibliographical references and index. : 9789004323797 : Available to subscribing member institutions only.

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