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Articles 31 - 60 of 560
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Berg’S Diary. – The Plant Anatomy, Victor Fet
Review Of Humans And Paragons: Essays On Super-Hero Justice, Thomas E. Simmons
Review Of Humans And Paragons: Essays On Super-Hero Justice, Thomas E. Simmons
Thomas E. Simmons
No abstract provided.
Ish: How To Write Poemish (Research) Poetry, Maria K. Lahman Ph.D., Veronica M. Richard Ph.D., Eric D. Teman J.D., Ph.D.
Ish: How To Write Poemish (Research) Poetry, Maria K. Lahman Ph.D., Veronica M. Richard Ph.D., Eric D. Teman J.D., Ph.D.
Eric D Teman, J.D., Ph.D.
The Internet Of Babel, Michael J. Paulus Jr.
The Internet Of Babel, Michael J. Paulus Jr.
Michael J. Paulus, Jr.
What Do You Give To A God Who Has Everything? "In The Bleak Mid-Winter", Leslie A. Engelson
What Do You Give To A God Who Has Everything? "In The Bleak Mid-Winter", Leslie A. Engelson
Leslie Engelson
Emily Dickinson, Fascicle 26 / Packet 84 (Mobile Version), Jon Miller
Emily Dickinson, Fascicle 26 / Packet 84 (Mobile Version), Jon Miller
Jon Miller
Emily Dickinson, Fascicle 26 / Packet 84, Jon Miller
Emily Dickinson, Fascicle 26 / Packet 84, Jon Miller
Jon Miller
Adventures With Animals Big And Small, Emily Allen, Marcus Blandford, Shannon Brennan, Brennen Keen, Amanda Timm, Tara Penry, Sarah Obendorf
Adventures With Animals Big And Small, Emily Allen, Marcus Blandford, Shannon Brennan, Brennen Keen, Amanda Timm, Tara Penry, Sarah Obendorf
Tara Penry
The purpose of this project is to produce a short collection of out-of-print children’s stories that would be suitable for first grade level readers. Stories selected for the collection fit the theme of being seasonally themed and include animals as main protagonists. Under the guidance of Dr. Tara Penry, the class searched children’s magazines from the late 1800’s and early 1900’s to find stories that would be relevant and interesting to today’s elementary schoolers.
Reinventing Language, Vowel By Colorful Vowel, Clark Lunberry
Reinventing Language, Vowel By Colorful Vowel, Clark Lunberry
Clark Lunberry
A Fable of a Fable, or “The Story of One of My Follies”: After he’d invented “the color of vowels,” regulated the “form and movement of each consonant,” the young poet then, applying his “instinctive rhythms” to the task, proudly proclaimed that he had alchemically created “a poetic language accessible, some day, to all the senses.” Notably, with his project in place, this poet, Arthur Rimbaud, tells us that he was then quick to “reserve translation rights.” This legal move on the poet’s part was perhaps thought initially necessary because, as he notes in 1873, the described synesthetic impact of …
Bodies Of Water: Somebody | Nobody (For E.D.), Clark Lunberry
Bodies Of Water: Somebody | Nobody (For E.D.), Clark Lunberry
Clark Lunberry
On a pond adjacent to the University of North Florida’s Thomas G. Carpenter Library, parts of Emily Dickinson’s well-known poem about being a “Nobody” were recently written on the water. During the fall of 2014, the familiar words of that poem’s opening line – “I’m Nobody! Who are you?” – appeared to float upon the library’s pond, reflecting vividly in the light of day (yet disappearing entirely in the dark of night). While inside the library’s large open stairway, on the tall windows that face directly out onto that pond, the first line of the poem’s second stanza – “How …
That’S The Beauty Of It, Or, Why John Ashbery Is Not A Painter, Clark Lunberry
That’S The Beauty Of It, Or, Why John Ashbery Is Not A Painter, Clark Lunberry
Clark Lunberry
The poet John Ashbery lived in Paris from roughly 1955 to 1965. It was during this period that Ashbery began writing art reviews, often examining the work of various Americans also living in Paris at this time. Among the many painters Ashbery was to review and publish about, one was the Chicago-born, Paris-based abstract expressionist Joan Mitchell and an exhibition of hers at a Paris gallery in 1964. In this essay I examine the early, more ““abstract”” poetry that Ashbery was developing during this period, thinking about it alongside the paintings of Mitchell (and, in particular, his writings about them). …
For The Want Of A Shoe..., Margaret Lundberg
Book Review Of Robert Morgan's Nonfiction Books, Ted Olson
Book Review Of Robert Morgan's Nonfiction Books, Ted Olson
Ted Olson
Robert Morgan's Nonfiction Books
The Longest Night, Ted Olson
Book Review Of The Oxford Book Of American Poetry: The Difficulty Of Anthologizing American Poetry, Ted Olson
Book Review Of The Oxford Book Of American Poetry: The Difficulty Of Anthologizing American Poetry, Ted Olson
Ted Olson
Review of The Oxford Book of American Poetry: The Difficulty of Anthologizing American Poetry
Book Review Of Caleb Beissert: Federico Garcia Lorca & Pablo Neruda: Beautiful, Translations From The Spanish, Ted Olson
Ted Olson
Review of Caleb Beissert: Federico Garcia Lorca & Pablo Neruda: Beautiful, Translations from the Spanish
Book Review Of Hank Reineke: Arlo Guthrie: The Warner Reprise Years, Ted Olson
Book Review Of Hank Reineke: Arlo Guthrie: The Warner Reprise Years, Ted Olson
Ted Olson
Arlo Guthrie: The Warner/Reprise Years. By Hank Reineke. (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 2012. Pp. xix + 327, series editor's foreword, preface, acknowledgments, discography, bibliography, index, 11 photographs, three illustrations.)
The National Storytelling Festival: Words, Music, And Memories, Ted Olson
The National Storytelling Festival: Words, Music, And Memories, Ted Olson
Ted Olson
Excerpt: A Other acclaimed masters of the spoken word scheduled to appear at this year’s Festival include David Novak, Minton Sparks, Joseph Bruchac, Milbre Burch, and Jackson Gillman. Each year the Festival seeks to represent storytelling from a range of cultural traditions, and this year is no exception. Rev. Robert Jones and Diane Ferlatte will present stories and music relating African American experience, while Festival attendees may also see and hear performances by Yiddish storyteller Shonaleigh, Chinese American storyteller and musician Charlie Chin, and Brazilian performance artist Antonio Rocha. Several special events will be held in Anyone who shares an …
Word-Weaving In Tennessee: The National Storytelling Festival, Ted Olson
Word-Weaving In Tennessee: The National Storytelling Festival, Ted Olson
Ted Olson
Excerpt: Appalachia is a storied land. Every place within the region has its own story, and virtually every person who has spent a significant amount of time in a specific Appalachian place has been affected by—indeed, has become part of—that story.
Robinson Jeffers: Appalachian, Californian, Poet, Ted Olson
Robinson Jeffers: Appalachian, Californian, Poet, Ted Olson
Ted Olson
Excerpt: April is also National Poetry Month, and this column will focus on an April-themed poem—not one of the many April poems evincing sincere religiosity or forced sentimentality, and not that famous poem that cynically asserts that “April is the cruelest month, breeding / Lilacs out of the dead land.
James Still: The Dean Of Appalachian Literature, Ted Olson
James Still: The Dean Of Appalachian Literature, Ted Olson
Ted Olson
Excerpt: James Still (1906-2001) wrote “Heritage,” his signature poem, in 1935, and he continued to read it before audiences large and small into the 21st Century.
Жеф, Чйлфпт. Учпвпдб. – Юфп, Еумй?... – Еэј Оейъчеуфоп, Victor Fet
Жеф, Чйлфпт. Учпвпдб. – Юфп, Еумй?... – Еэј Оейъчеуфоп, Victor Fet
Victor Fet
No abstract provided.
Жизнь В Человеке, Victor Fet
Snow White, Leslie Gielow Jacobs
Poetry As The Scholar's Art: An Interview With Poet Amy Newman, Julie Miller
Poetry As The Scholar's Art: An Interview With Poet Amy Newman, Julie Miller
Julie L. Miller
No abstract provided.
How To Interview Your Mother About Her Lost Childhood, Umeeta Sadarangani
How To Interview Your Mother About Her Lost Childhood, Umeeta Sadarangani
Umeeta Sadarangani
How many ways are there to approach your mother for an interview about her childhood experiences during the 1947 Partition of India? There are three. Also, expect phone calls.
Forsaken Trust, Meredith Doench
Forsaken Trust, Meredith Doench
Meredith Doench
Book 2 in the Luce Hansen Thriller series. Third book forthcoming.
Description from the publisher:
Wallace Lake, Ohio, takes care of their own. Unwelcoming of outsiders, the community closes ranks when four women are found murdered along the water’s edge. Agent Luce Hansen of the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation must find a way in before another woman loses her life to the ruthless serial killer.
With the help of her new team—a hot rookie and a smart, beautiful medical examiner—Luce uncovers a ring of devotion surrounding the prime suspect. As Luce works to unearth the dark secrets of this …
A Particular Providence: Linked Tales Of Storms Finding Distressed Family Trees, James J. Magee
A Particular Providence: Linked Tales Of Storms Finding Distressed Family Trees, James J. Magee
James J. Magee
No abstract provided.
Barrel O' Fun, Cynthia Dobbs
Erma Bombeck Blog: 'This Is Not An Emergency', Maureen E. Schlangen