Showing 801 - 820 results of 1,047 for search '"poetry"', query time: 0.04s Refine Results
  1. 801

    Prosodic and Topical Variety in Khaqanis' âRubaies by احمد غنی‌پور ملکشاه, مهدی صراحتی جویباری

    Published 2010-12-01
    “…For centuries âRubaiâ Because of its traits comparing âwith other forms of poetry has always been considered by âliterary men. …”
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  2. 802

    Duncan’s Stein Writings: Derivation and Logopoeia by Daniel Katz

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…This allows for a recontextualisation of Stein within the history of Anglo-American modernist poetry by women, and a consideration of its consequences. …”
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  3. 803

    About the Crusaders School, its Domicile and their main Artefact by Duňa SLAVÍKOVÁ

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…In opposition to the cultural policies of Czech totalitarian structures, their artistic production introduced new practices that combined existing media from visual art, poetry, film, happening and music, abandoning the traditional terms of style, medium and representation. …”
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  4. 804

    Poésie/collage : Deux modalités du faire dans le champ de l’autre by Claudine Armand

    Published 2007-02-01
    “…Driven by the same desire to express an inner experience and to explore the complex relationship between the I and the others, the author has shifted from poetry and short story writing to engraving and collage. …”
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  5. 805

    De la petite chanson aux rafales du vent : le parcours de la ritournelle dans l’œuvre poétique d’Emily Brontë by Charlotte Borie

    Published 2010-06-01
    “…This little song is to be found in Emily Brontë’s poetry, repeating itself, evolving, up until its essence is finally endorsed by the voice of the wind which woos the poet into a poetic transe. …”
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  6. 806

    Une géopoétique : du récit de voyage à Canaima, de Rómulo Gallegos by François Delprat

    Published 2009-12-01
    “…The trip upstream looking for the sources of the great river and the voyage following the flow of its waters downstream becomes, through the novel, a return to the powers of the universe and a turbulent poetry of action in the flow of time.…”
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  7. 807

    Cesta pekelného notáře z Mexika do Kuksu by Pavel Štěpánek

    Published 2012-04-01
    “…The tradition continues till the end of the 19th century, as we can see by the mutilated expressions of that name in the poetry (documented in Beethoven and, after all, Heine) and even in the Bohemian Glass. …”
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  8. 808

    Jogos, sociabilidade e conflito no Brasil by Édison Gastaldo, Everardo Rocha, Adriana Braga

    Published 2016-01-01
    “…According to the classic formulation of Johan Huizinga’s Homo ludens (from 1938), culture itself would derive its fundamental features from the elementary structure of play. To him, poetry, law, war, music, religion and everything we regard as serious, sacred and respectful derive at some level from ancient sacred games, and still keep their elementary features. …”
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  9. 809

    “God’s Grandeur” by Gerard Manley Hopkins. A Poetic Path into the Depths of Contemplation by Marcin Godawa

    Published 2023-06-01
    “…The present paper concerns the question of how Christian contemplation, in the sense of a simple loving gaze on God and His works, could be prepared and supported by poetry by using the properties of poetic speech in the field of semantics, syntax as well as sound effects. …”
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  10. 810

    Assassinio nella Cattedrale de Pizzetti :le retour du religieux sur la scène musicale italienne des années 1950 by Walter Zidaric

    Published 2014-10-01
    “…He shared with Eliot a passion for Dante’s poetry, but Bishop Bell’s commission for Eliot’s play in 1934 coincided with the poet’s accepting a new social role as a consequence of his conversion to Anglicanism. …”
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  11. 811

    Stefan George: Von einer Begegnung (1890) by Klaus Wieland

    Published 2019-07-01
    “…Subsequently, it analyzes Stefan George’s famous poem Von einer Begegnung as an example of German turn-of-the-century poetry, taking into consideration the pre-texts of Dante, Petrarch and Baudelaire to which George´s poem refers intertextually. …”
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  12. 812

    After great pain a formal feeling comes. Quelques notes sur la formalisation lyrique du trauma by Antoine Cazé

    Published 2015-10-01
    “…In this article, I first analyze the primordial link between lyric poetry and trauma, existing from the Greek origins of the genre. …”
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  13. 813

    « Little grunts, the grins and grimaces of recognition »: Resistance and Exchange in Paul Muldoon and Norman MacBeath’s Plan B by Alexandra Tauvry

    Published 2014-06-01
    “…However, although this work confronts poems with photographs in praesentia, Muldoon increasingly resorts to the literary device of ekphrasis in order to exploit the work of photographers. Muldoon’s poetry is sometimes akin to a palimpsest, a repository of words and concealed images, which only appear beneath the surface, in absentia.…”
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  14. 814

    La propagande du rêve. Le discours de l’Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional : pour une poétique de la résistance by Nathalie Galland

    Published 2010-01-01
    “…If it is propaganda - linked to its etymological origin of “spreading”, it is a dream propaganda, engaging in the overflow, in the nonalignment of poetry, in the freedom of the spoken word, much more than dogmatic political discourse. …”
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  15. 815

    Transparency, Translucency, and Obscurity in the Victorian Monologue by Jean-Charles Perquin

    Published 2013-03-01
    “…In other words, the reader reconstructs the speech in the back of the voiceless listener’s mind, thus adding to the natural difficulty of poetic language. If poetry rests on the maximal use of the possibilities of language, the genre of the dramatic monologue adds to that condition the indirection of speech, i.e. the fact that the addressee has to miss the message the reader has to understand in order to build an intricate mesh of misunderstandings. …”
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  16. 816

    Rhetorical terms in Safavid biographies by محمد رضایی, آرزو نقی زاده

    Published 2013-07-01
    “…In the Safavid era âwith the fusion of Persian poetry and the taste of Hindi poets ââ,further developments of this sort happened. …”
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  17. 817

    Une grammaire occitane jamais publiée : La Gramatica Auvernhata de Benezet Vidal by Jean Roux

    Published 2020-08-01
    “…Disciple of the College of Occitania he promoted and diffused the spelling developed by Estieu and Perbosc in this province. Besides novels and poetry, he devoted himself to the writing of two two works with pedagogical aims, Lo libret de l’escolan auvernhat (the booklet of Occitan schoolboy) published in 1936 and a Gramatica auvernhata (Auvergnate grammar) written in 1943 but never printed. …”
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  18. 818

    Vivimos en una noche oscura ou la voi(e)x de la révolte chez César Muñoz Arconada by Claude Le Bigot

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…However, Arconada did not adopt the style of proletarian poetry. By choosing the long verse form, he gives his speech an unprecedented epic breath, anxious to bring language revolution and social advancement together.…”
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  19. 819

    TEXTURE OF THE GENRE “VÈ” by Triều Nguyên

    Published 2019-12-01
    “…At the same time, the author of this paper also compares the structure of “Vè” to that of some other types of narrative folklore (such as poetry, “Trạng” stories, fables, etc.). Today, there is limited research about “Vè”, so the problem that this paper addresses will be quite useful, and it is important to learn more about this genre.…”
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  20. 820

    Aspecte ale „înregimentării asumate” de scriitori în presa comunistă din perioada 1949–1965 by Doina Matei Marcu

    Published 2015-12-01
    “…Authors who had to live in a totalitarian environment published poetry, prose, drama, literary criticism or political articles in the press as power had them do. …”
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