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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Trauma And Poetry. The Case Of Primo Levi, Ilona Klein
Trauma And Poetry. The Case Of Primo Levi, Ilona Klein
Faculty Publications
Most North American readers have come to know and appreciate Primo Levi by his major works in prose. His The Periodic Table (1984) catapulted Levi onto the American stage of scientific-humanistic authors, having the New York Times named it among the Best Books of the Year in 1985. Instead, American readers will likely stumble upon Levi’s poetry by accident, simply because every now and then one of his poems in translation appears in print somewhere. Compared to Levi’s prose, his poems inevitably evoke a sense of unease, for their tone, their style and their content are so unlike the familiar, …
The Importance Of The Physical: Lucille Clifton's Poetry About Bodies, Kaitlin Hoelzer
The Importance Of The Physical: Lucille Clifton's Poetry About Bodies, Kaitlin Hoelzer
AWE (A Woman’s Experience)
No abstract provided.
Plan B (Poetry), Madelyn Taylor
Plan B (Poetry), Madelyn Taylor
AWE (A Woman’s Experience)
Poetry. A young woman contemplates how an unplanned pregnancy can manifest the grace of God.
Dragonflies (Poetry), Chloe Jensen
Hallow Hallow (Poetry), Anna Salvania
Hallow Hallow (Poetry), Anna Salvania
AWE (A Woman’s Experience)
Poetry; experience of racism growing up
The Fluid Pastoral: African American Spiritual Waterways In The Urban Landscapes Of Harlem Renaissance Poetry, Maren E. Loveland
The Fluid Pastoral: African American Spiritual Waterways In The Urban Landscapes Of Harlem Renaissance Poetry, Maren E. Loveland
Criterion: A Journal of Literary Criticism
In 1921 Langston Hughes penned, “My soul has grown deep like the rivers” in his poem “The Negro Speaks of Rivers” (Hughes 1254). Weaving the profound pain of the African American experience with the symbolism of the primordial river, Hughes recognized the inherent power of water as a means of spiritual communication and religious significance. Departing from the traditional interpretation of the American pastoral as typified by white poets such as Robert Frost and Walt Whitman, the African American poets emerging from the Harlem Renaissance established a more nuanced pastoral landscape embedded within urban cultures, utilizing water in particular as …
Black Woman, Noemia De Sousa
Mother Of Mankind & Of The World, Kardo Bestilo
Ana The Prophetess In The Temple, Adelia Prado
Silent Emergency To The Children Of Africa, Vera Duarte
Silent Emergency To The Children Of Africa, Vera Duarte
AWE (A Woman’s Experience)
poetry
Good Girl, Erin Kaseda
Brave, Erin Kaseda
City/ What My Mother Told Her Daughter, Me, Kristin Perkins, Lexi Johnson
City/ What My Mother Told Her Daughter, Me, Kristin Perkins, Lexi Johnson
AWE (A Woman’s Experience)
artwork and poetry
Orchard, Sarah J. Carter
Miracles, Lisa A. Nielsen
Happiness, James Richards
President James Rethinks Ordelia, Mark Foster
Grandmother Naming, Shannon Castleton
Pah Tempe, Sally Stratford
The Mood This Afternoon, Krista Halverson
Adam's Song, James Richards
Dishes, Karl Thomas Rees
Qua Têt, Karl Thomas Rees
Dream Of The Anxiety Clinic, Shannon Castleton
Burials, Neil Aitken
Running Circles, N. Andrew Spackman
A Letter To The Person Who Will Go Through My Pockets When I'M Dead, Jerem Pickett
A Letter To The Person Who Will Go Through My Pockets When I'M Dead, Jerem Pickett
Inscape
No abstract provided.
Application, James Richards
Birth, Neil Aitken