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Articles 1 - 19 of 19
Full-Text Articles in Creative Writing
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). …
The Longest Night, Ted Olson
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
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.
Giving Poems: Motivation And Personality In The Reading And Sharing Of Poetry, Leeann Bartolini
Giving Poems: Motivation And Personality In The Reading And Sharing Of Poetry, Leeann Bartolini
LeeAnn Bartolini
- 14% of American population reads poetry.
- Readers in general and poetry readers in particular tend to be women with higher level of education.
- Poetry readers are not loners – high amounts of leisure activity and high sociability.
- Poetry readers tend …
Eki Mae Poems [Volume 1], Judy Halebsky, Yuka Tsukagoshi, Fumiko Yamanaka, Ayumu Akutsu
Eki Mae Poems [Volume 1], Judy Halebsky, Yuka Tsukagoshi, Fumiko Yamanaka, Ayumu Akutsu
Judy Halebsky
Bilingual Japanese-English poetry journal.
Eki Mae Poems [Volume 3], Ilya Kaminsky, Yuka Tsukagoshi, Judy Halebsky, Ayumu Akutsu
Eki Mae Poems [Volume 3], Ilya Kaminsky, Yuka Tsukagoshi, Judy Halebsky, Ayumu Akutsu
Judy Halebsky
Bilingual Japanese-English poetry journal.
Eki Mae Poems [Volume 2], Brenda Hillman, Yuka Tsukagoshi, Judy Halebsky, Ayumu Akutsu
Eki Mae Poems [Volume 2], Brenda Hillman, Yuka Tsukagoshi, Judy Halebsky, Ayumu Akutsu
Judy Halebsky
Bilingual Japanese-English poetry journal.
Not Conceited, Tara Thompson
Forgotten, Tara Thompson
The New Recruit, Tara Thompson
W I N D F A L L, Tara Thompson
I Am Pissed Off, Tara Thompson
I Am Pissed Off, Tara Thompson
Tara Thompson
She Was, Tara Thompson
Primary Drive, Tara Thompson
Irb As Poetry, Maria K. Lahman Ph.D., Eric D. Teman J.D., Ph.D., Veronica M. Richard Ph.D.
Irb As Poetry, Maria K. Lahman Ph.D., Eric D. Teman J.D., Ph.D., Veronica M. Richard Ph.D.
Eric D Teman, J.D., Ph.D.