william mason: a study - Research Explorer
... This thesis is an examination of the work of William Mason, an eighteenthcentury poet who, though highly regarded in his own time, is little known in ours. The thesis seeks to revalidate Mason as a poet worthy of attention in the twenty-first century. The Introduction contextualises Mason, both soci ...
... This thesis is an examination of the work of William Mason, an eighteenthcentury poet who, though highly regarded in his own time, is little known in ours. The thesis seeks to revalidate Mason as a poet worthy of attention in the twenty-first century. The Introduction contextualises Mason, both soci ...
Visible-izing Praxis Through Mimicry in Phillis Wheatley`s
... interaction and struggle between one’s own and another’s word’” but it evinced a poet aesthetically committed to praxis, to being master of her literary situation (Hamilton, Ture 36). In Black Power, The Politics of Liberation, Charles Hamilton and Kwame Turé (formerly Stokely Carmichael) succinctly ...
... interaction and struggle between one’s own and another’s word’” but it evinced a poet aesthetically committed to praxis, to being master of her literary situation (Hamilton, Ture 36). In Black Power, The Politics of Liberation, Charles Hamilton and Kwame Turé (formerly Stokely Carmichael) succinctly ...
Counter-figures - Pajari Räsänen
... (and that is, more or less, anything at all) can be considered ‘counter-figurative’ with regard to the formation of images and figures, ideas and schemas, “any graven image, or any likeness of any thing”. This is why singularity and radical alterity are key issues here, and why an ethical dimension ...
... (and that is, more or less, anything at all) can be considered ‘counter-figurative’ with regard to the formation of images and figures, ideas and schemas, “any graven image, or any likeness of any thing”. This is why singularity and radical alterity are key issues here, and why an ethical dimension ...
READING AS SCULPTURE: RONI HORN AND EMILY DICKINSON
... signs, to refer to that which is not present. The ordinary usage of language doesn’t emphasize this absence, however, but quickly replaces it with image or concept. As Blanchot puts it, “I say, ‘This woman,’ and she is immediately available to me, I push her away, I bring her close, she is everythin ...
... signs, to refer to that which is not present. The ordinary usage of language doesn’t emphasize this absence, however, but quickly replaces it with image or concept. As Blanchot puts it, “I say, ‘This woman,’ and she is immediately available to me, I push her away, I bring her close, she is everythin ...
View - OhioLINK Electronic Theses and Dissertations Center
... faculty of speech, discourse or even language.4 In the present discussion, the term "feminine voice" is specifically used to describe the multiple ways in which female speech is rendered in literary texts. In this study then, it would be useful to explain concepts such as female (as in female voice) ...
... faculty of speech, discourse or even language.4 In the present discussion, the term "feminine voice" is specifically used to describe the multiple ways in which female speech is rendered in literary texts. In this study then, it would be useful to explain concepts such as female (as in female voice) ...
THEODORE ROETHKE, PANTHEIST An abstract of a thesis by
... of implied pantheism in Roethke's early poems, a pattern more obviously developed in the middle poems, and even more fully expr~ssed or implied in the later poems, including those publ~shed after his death. And so, in an attempt to prove that Roethke's poetry is 'pantheistic, this thesis first contr ...
... of implied pantheism in Roethke's early poems, a pattern more obviously developed in the middle poems, and even more fully expr~ssed or implied in the later poems, including those publ~shed after his death. And so, in an attempt to prove that Roethke's poetry is 'pantheistic, this thesis first contr ...
“I Have Heard it Said”: Towards a New Translation of Beowulf
... translation offered is merely one of many rather than a definitive account. Don Paterson has referred to his translations as 'versions' of Rilke's Die Sonette an Orpheus . It seems that more experimental translators, particularly when they are established as poets in their own right, tend to highli ...
... translation offered is merely one of many rather than a definitive account. Don Paterson has referred to his translations as 'versions' of Rilke's Die Sonette an Orpheus . It seems that more experimental translators, particularly when they are established as poets in their own right, tend to highli ...
Whitman in Translation: A Seminar
... languages, translations of Sections 1 and 5 of “Song of Myself,” and, later, translations of the Drum-Taps poem, “Reconciliation.” Partici pants decided to open discussion with some of the problems translators face in Section 5 of “Song of Myself.” The discussion first focused on details—how to tra ...
... languages, translations of Sections 1 and 5 of “Song of Myself,” and, later, translations of the Drum-Taps poem, “Reconciliation.” Partici pants decided to open discussion with some of the problems translators face in Section 5 of “Song of Myself.” The discussion first focused on details—how to tra ...
Elizabeth Bishop: Translation as Poetics
... is hardly appropriate as translation always forms an essential part both of literature as a whole, and particularly of the works of individual authors. We could even attempt a typology of poets based on their experience with translation or the lack of it; the work of a translator, the intimate exper ...
... is hardly appropriate as translation always forms an essential part both of literature as a whole, and particularly of the works of individual authors. We could even attempt a typology of poets based on their experience with translation or the lack of it; the work of a translator, the intimate exper ...
Humor and Ambiguity in Poetry
... Incongruity Theory, articulated by Kierkegaard, Kant, and many recent philosophers of humor, is therefore, through and through, the ideal choice—and perhaps the only choice—for analyses of lyric poetry. In terms of the methodological frames of the discussion, poetic humor will be defined variously i ...
... Incongruity Theory, articulated by Kierkegaard, Kant, and many recent philosophers of humor, is therefore, through and through, the ideal choice—and perhaps the only choice—for analyses of lyric poetry. In terms of the methodological frames of the discussion, poetic humor will be defined variously i ...
TR 63 - H - booked - Center for Translation Studies
... PS: Do you see the translator as an insider in the creation of the work, or as an outsider, looking in? DU: Most definitely as an insider. The translator must, almost by definition, be able to get into the skin of the original. This is most true in translating poetry. The poet/translator has to unde ...
... PS: Do you see the translator as an insider in the creation of the work, or as an outsider, looking in? DU: Most definitely as an insider. The translator must, almost by definition, be able to get into the skin of the original. This is most true in translating poetry. The poet/translator has to unde ...
The Sensuous Order, Faith and Love in the Poetry
... It is the preoccupation with his world that comprises the center of Wallace Stevens' theory of poetry. Thematically, the world exists as a basis for any theoretical propositions which are set forth in his poems. "A most attractive idea to me is the idea that we are all ^Wallace Stevens, letter to Ro ...
... It is the preoccupation with his world that comprises the center of Wallace Stevens' theory of poetry. Thematically, the world exists as a basis for any theoretical propositions which are set forth in his poems. "A most attractive idea to me is the idea that we are all ^Wallace Stevens, letter to Ro ...
British Literature I: The Middle Ages, Renaissance
... The Norton Anthology and this course guide will help you to understand the words and the world that produced them, but your response will be determined by your own efforts. I don’t expect you to love each work—some of the writing may seem difficult, some of the beliefs ridiculous. But I do expect y ...
... The Norton Anthology and this course guide will help you to understand the words and the world that produced them, but your response will be determined by your own efforts. I don’t expect you to love each work—some of the writing may seem difficult, some of the beliefs ridiculous. But I do expect y ...
Lyric and the Rhetoric of the Serial Mode in Twentieth Century
... itself, and moreover, in a play of voices that ask to be read both lyrically and eloquently, in turns. What comes under question, however, is the very issue that Jackson frames: what does it mean to read this poem as lyric? Within the context of After Lorca, can one make a distinction between “hear ...
... itself, and moreover, in a play of voices that ask to be read both lyrically and eloquently, in turns. What comes under question, however, is the very issue that Jackson frames: what does it mean to read this poem as lyric? Within the context of After Lorca, can one make a distinction between “hear ...
Feints, Apparitions and Mode of Locomotion
... inclination was plainly desperate,” and so forth. Naturally this is fun, and sometimes funny, which is a bonus. Yet as a poet you want to write a good poem, not merely nonsense. And you want to create something that does glance off or comment on the various meanings of the original. So I have taken ...
... inclination was plainly desperate,” and so forth. Naturally this is fun, and sometimes funny, which is a bonus. Yet as a poet you want to write a good poem, not merely nonsense. And you want to create something that does glance off or comment on the various meanings of the original. So I have taken ...
Eudora Welty and the Poetry of WB Yeats
... The Golden Apples presents the possibility that Welty there mines further the rich ground she found in Yeats’s poetry in the earlier collection, even though his poetry has rarely been included in the conversations about The Bride of the Innisfallen.3 I will argue that Yeats’s late poem “Sailing to B ...
... The Golden Apples presents the possibility that Welty there mines further the rich ground she found in Yeats’s poetry in the earlier collection, even though his poetry has rarely been included in the conversations about The Bride of the Innisfallen.3 I will argue that Yeats’s late poem “Sailing to B ...
- Institutional Repository of IAIN Tulungagung
... of ideas and feelings through a rhythmical composition of imaginative and beautiful words selected for their sonorous effects. Poem characteristics can be seen from language that is used and forms of that poem. Poem contains rhyme, rhythm, and figurative language. Meanwhile poem form consisting coup ...
... of ideas and feelings through a rhythmical composition of imaginative and beautiful words selected for their sonorous effects. Poem characteristics can be seen from language that is used and forms of that poem. Poem contains rhyme, rhythm, and figurative language. Meanwhile poem form consisting coup ...
Last Things - Emily - Global Public Library
... always an abrogation of human limits compatible with a stern morality. Her closest forebears on matters of principle are the Stoics. Their indifference to an afterlife, belief in a divine principle within human beings rather than external to them, and ‘self-controlling self-reliance’ are the primary ...
... always an abrogation of human limits compatible with a stern morality. Her closest forebears on matters of principle are the Stoics. Their indifference to an afterlife, belief in a divine principle within human beings rather than external to them, and ‘self-controlling self-reliance’ are the primary ...
11_chapter 5
... add to the meaning of war by writing (no, Jung), he intends to say that, to be more appropriate, he is waging jung which is a bit different from war. Here glossing complicates meaning of the couplet: he can be in conflict beyond English or fighting beyond English and so an. Similarly the best (ar-R ...
... add to the meaning of war by writing (no, Jung), he intends to say that, to be more appropriate, he is waging jung which is a bit different from war. Here glossing complicates meaning of the couplet: he can be in conflict beyond English or fighting beyond English and so an. Similarly the best (ar-R ...
Guide for Students
... enjoyable; however, it is also challenging. Developing the ability to take an analytical approach towards literature requires practice and discipline. • Literature’s grand themes require us to think about characters and their choices. They also require us to think about, and make sense of, these cho ...
... enjoyable; however, it is also challenging. Developing the ability to take an analytical approach towards literature requires practice and discipline. • Literature’s grand themes require us to think about characters and their choices. They also require us to think about, and make sense of, these cho ...
Darwin`s Bards: British and American Poetry in the Age of Evolution
... Mendelism was not yet complete, while many of the most incisive poets who have tackled Darwinism were barely able to read, let alone write. This book aims to plug this gap in our understanding, both of poetry and of the Darwinian condition itself. My hope is that it will have as much to say to scien ...
... Mendelism was not yet complete, while many of the most incisive poets who have tackled Darwinism were barely able to read, let alone write. This book aims to plug this gap in our understanding, both of poetry and of the Darwinian condition itself. My hope is that it will have as much to say to scien ...
Types of Poetry - Immaculata Catholic School
... memories, and bring light to new and old ideas. All poetry has been written by real people with real feelings and thoughts. Everybody can read poetry, and everyone can write it. There are messages within poetry about life, love, struggle, happiness, sadness, fear, and fearlessness. Poetry can repres ...
... memories, and bring light to new and old ideas. All poetry has been written by real people with real feelings and thoughts. Everybody can read poetry, and everyone can write it. There are messages within poetry about life, love, struggle, happiness, sadness, fear, and fearlessness. Poetry can repres ...
title of thesis or dissertation, worded exactly as it
... literary and philosophical aims of the long eighteenth century. Both eras were populated by writers attempting to engage with social politics, many of whom were forced to develop this political commentary through indirect means. Thus, ironically, both in the positive rationality of the Age of Enligh ...
... literary and philosophical aims of the long eighteenth century. Both eras were populated by writers attempting to engage with social politics, many of whom were forced to develop this political commentary through indirect means. Thus, ironically, both in the positive rationality of the Age of Enligh ...
Northern Kurdish poetic features with an application to
... schemes found in the corpus. Much of the information concerning verse forms in Northern Kurdish poetry was obtained by means of interviews with poets and an editor of poetry. The second part of the analysis is on the syntactic level, where I identify deviations from common speech and variations in l ...
... schemes found in the corpus. Much of the information concerning verse forms in Northern Kurdish poetry was obtained by means of interviews with poets and an editor of poetry. The second part of the analysis is on the syntactic level, where I identify deviations from common speech and variations in l ...
Rhyme patterns - WordPress.com
... There is a particular kind of near rhyme that can be described with precision. This is called CONSONANTAL RHYME or PARARHYME and was used a great deal by Wilfred Owen in his poetry of the First World War. In Pararhyme the consonant sounds of the two related words are identical but the vowel sound mu ...
... There is a particular kind of near rhyme that can be described with precision. This is called CONSONANTAL RHYME or PARARHYME and was used a great deal by Wilfred Owen in his poetry of the First World War. In Pararhyme the consonant sounds of the two related words are identical but the vowel sound mu ...
Ashik
An ashiq, ashik, or ashough (Armenian: աշուղ ašuġ, Azerbaijani: aşıq, Georgian: აშუღი ašuġi, Greek: ασίκης, Persian: عاشیق, Turkish: aşık) is a mystic bard, balladeer, or troubadour who accompanied his song—be it a hikaye (Persian: dastan, a traditional epic or a romantic tale) or a shorter original composition—with a long necked lute (saz). The modern Azerbaijani ashiq is a professional musician who usually serves an apprenticeship, masters playing saz, and builds up a varied but individual repertoire of Turkic folk songs. The word ashiq derives from the Arabic word ʿāšiq (عاشق: ""in love, lovelorn""). See ʿāšiq for further origin and sense development. The Turkish term that ashik superseded was ozan. In the early armies of the Turks, as far back as that of Attila, the ruler was invariably accompanied by an ozan. The heroic poems, which they recited to the accompaniment of the kopuz, flattered the sensibilities of an entire people.