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Articles 1 - 30 of 49
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Love, Labor, And Sloth In Chaucer’S Troilus And Criseyde, Gregory Sadlek
Love, Labor, And Sloth In Chaucer’S Troilus And Criseyde, Gregory Sadlek
Gregory M Sadlek
No abstract provided.
Negotiating 'Negative Capability': The Role Of Place In Writing For Two Australian Poets, Lynda Hawryluk
Negotiating 'Negative Capability': The Role Of Place In Writing For Two Australian Poets, Lynda Hawryluk
Dr Lynda Hawryluk
This paper takes its lead from the poet John Keats’ notion of ‘negative capability’ (1891: 48), exploring some of the key methodologies of representing landscapes in writing, specifically using place to effect the process of ‘… being capable of being in uncertainties, Mysteries, doubt, without any irritable reaching after fact and reason …’ (48).
Keats refers to the poet as ‘taking part’ in the life of the poem; and being in the poem. This paper features our own poetry, located in two different landscapes and with its own understanding of place, which captures a sense of connection to rugged and …
Rapture, John Gery
The Girl I Knew Once, John Gery
Bestial Oblivion, John Gery
Eighteenth-Century Poetry And The Rise Of The Novel Reconsidered, Courtney Smith, Kate Parker
Eighteenth-Century Poetry And The Rise Of The Novel Reconsidered, Courtney Smith, Kate Parker
Courtney Weiss Smith
"Eighteenth-Century Poetry and the Rise of the Novel Reconsidered" begins with the brute fact that poetry jostled up alongside novels in the bookstalls of eighteenth-century England. Indeed, by exploring unexpected collisions and collusions between poetry and novels, this volume of exciting, new essays offers a reconsideration of the literary and cultural history of the period. The novel poached from and featured poetry, and the “modern” subjects and objects privileged by “rise of the novel” scholarship are only one part of a world full of animate things and people with indistinct boundaries. http://www.bucknell.edu/script/upress/book.asp?id=2501
Starting To Work The California Garden In Winter, Leeann Bartolini
Starting To Work The California Garden In Winter, Leeann Bartolini
LeeAnn Bartolini
French Kissing The Earth, Leeann Bartolini
French Kissing The Earth, Leeann Bartolini
LeeAnn Bartolini
Her Eyes, Leeann Bartolini
Her Eyes, Leeann Bartolini
LeeAnn Bartolini
“Acceptance, Finally” And “In Our Time” (Poems), John Gery
“Acceptance, Finally” And “In Our Time” (Poems), John Gery
John R O Gery
No abstract provided.
Stump (Poem), John Gery
Grief (Poem), John Gery
“Lie #4: That Frances Osgood Slept With E.A. Poe” And “Lie #6: That Hart Crane Crawled In Bed Between The Cowleys” (Poems), John Gery
John R O Gery
No abstract provided.
“To A Friend Dying Of Cancer In A War Zone,” “Spring Offensive,” “’Paramilitary,’” “The Secret Of Stealth,” And “Summit Summary” (Poems), John Gery
John R O Gery
No abstract provided.
The Sleeping Camel Hosts An Indian Summer Squall, Lynda Hawryluk
The Sleeping Camel Hosts An Indian Summer Squall, Lynda Hawryluk
Dr Lynda Hawryluk
A collaboration of writers and artists led to the writing of a poetic tribute to Peter Indans’ work and subsequently his legacy, in the poem The Sleeping Camel hosts an Indian summer squall. The discussion here has as its’ focus the relationship between writers, artists and the landscapes they explore in their chosen medium.
Writing Public Poetry: Humanism And The Woman Writer, Elaine Beilin
Writing Public Poetry: Humanism And The Woman Writer, Elaine Beilin
Elaine V. Beilin
Describes how three middle-class poets, Isabella Whitney, Anne Dowriche and Rachel Speght, revise the humanist concept of the learned lady by repositioning her and her work in the domain of public poetry. Writings on social, moral, political, and historical topics; Challenged the limitations set by men who supported and provided a humanist education for women; Effectively revised the humanist dogma on the place of women's work; More.
Birthright 2012, Andrew Blitman
Birthright 2012, Andrew Blitman
Andrew Blitman
"Birthright 2012" is a personal account of my voyage throughout Israel. The outer story incorporates humor, science, history, and my own observations as I explore the land. It should appeal to the armchair traveler who would like to experience the country but is unable to and also to anyone who would like to learn more about this bastion of democracy in the Middle East. Beneath this outer story there exists an inner story. Filled with humor, philosophy, and poetry, this underlying aspect of the book follows my own personal voyage to self-awareness. "Birthright 2012" chronicles the daily activities of my …
Words In Blood, Like Flowers: Philosophy And Poetry, Music And Eros In Hölderlin, Nietzsche, And Heidegger, Babette Babich
Words In Blood, Like Flowers: Philosophy And Poetry, Music And Eros In Hölderlin, Nietzsche, And Heidegger, Babette Babich
Babette Babich
No abstract provided.
And You Said You Knew Me When, Thomas Bacher
Einstein And Love, Thomas Bacher
Stanford University's Paul Laurence Dunbar Conference-Dunbar: The Originator-Part Ii, Joanne Braxton
Stanford University's Paul Laurence Dunbar Conference-Dunbar: The Originator-Part Ii, Joanne Braxton
Joanne Braxton
Stanford University's Paul Laurence Dunbar Conference-Dunbar:The Originator Part I, Joanne Braxton
Stanford University's Paul Laurence Dunbar Conference-Dunbar:The Originator Part I, Joanne Braxton
Joanne Braxton
Man Poems: From Beer And Gears To Grills And Girls, Christopher Ward
Man Poems: From Beer And Gears To Grills And Girls, Christopher Ward
Christopher Ward
Man Poems: From Beer and Gears to Grills and Girls is a collection of poetry aimed at males between the ages of 20-40. From casual observation, including the spectacular wonders of alcohol and the female body, to the humorous: re-visiting the classic heavy rock hits of the 1980s, the varied works of Man Poems offer an interesting look into the mind and surroundings of author Christopher Ward.
Buying Dope Nyc Style, Thomas Bacher
Modernity/Post (A Nod To Robert Hass), Leeann Bartolini
Modernity/Post (A Nod To Robert Hass), Leeann Bartolini
LeeAnn Bartolini
No abstract provided.
Poetry Of Aunts, Leeann Bartolini
Poetry Of Aunts, Leeann Bartolini
LeeAnn Bartolini
Note To A Suffering Patient, Leeann Bartolini
Note To A Suffering Patient, Leeann Bartolini
LeeAnn Bartolini
The Language Of Horses, Julie Hensley
The Language Of Horses, Julie Hensley
Julie Hensley
Advance Praise for The Language of Horses "These living, breathing poems woo us...and we happily succumb to their charms."
-Dorothy Sutton, author of Backing into Mountains and Startling Art: Darwin and Matisse
"Here, among mountains and cornfields, stables and laboratories, are compelling human tongues: mother, father, daughters, lovers. The Language of Horses, in Hensley's fertile imagination and deft hands, is indeed 'the language of life rising.'"
-Libby Falk Jones, author of Above the Eastern Hilltops, Blue
"Like the scents of haymows and meadows, these poems of longing carry the reader back to an idyllic childhood in Big Stone Gap, Virginia, …
Like A Dear In The Headlines, Thomas Bacher
Poe's Poetry Of The Exotic, Brian Yothers
Poe's Poetry Of The Exotic, Brian Yothers
Brian Yothers
This essay examines Edgar Allan Poe's poetry in relation to popular nineteenth-century American travel writing. The link takes you to a description of the book on the publisher's website.