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65 result(s) for "Martiny, Erik"
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A companion to poetic genre
\"A Companion to Poetic Genre brings together over 40 contributions from leading academics to provide critical overviews of poetic genres and their modern adaptations. Covers a large range of poetic cultural traditions from Britain, Ireland, North America, Japan and the Caribbea Summarises many genres from their earliest origins to their most recent renderings The only full-length critical collection to deal with modern adaptations of poetic genres Contributors include Bernard O'Donoghue, Stephen Burt, Jahan Ramazani, and many other notable scholars of poetry and poetics\"-- Provided by publisher.
A companion to poetic genre
A COMPANION TO POETIC GENRE A COMPANION TO POETIC GENRE This eagerly awaited Companion features over 40 contributions from leading academics around the world, and offers critical overviews of numerous poetic genres.
Aurora's Avatars: A Generic Approach to Modern Dawn Poetry
RésuméCet article étudie la poésie consacrée à l’aube afin d’explorer sa filiation ancestrale et de déterminer dans quelle mesure ses avatars modernes se rattachent aux formulations médiévales ainsi qu’aux réécritures du genre à la Renaissance. Il place l’“Aubade” de Philip Larkin au cœur de l’évolution récente de la poésie matinale tout en considérant que le poème n’est pas sans antécédent et n’a pas détourné le cours du genre de manière durable. AbstractThis essay takes a look at dawn poetry to examine its ancestral lineage and the degree to which it connects with medieval formulations, and Renaissance reconfigurations, of the genre. It lays emphasis on the eminence of Philip Larkin’s “Aubade” in the recent history of dawn poetry, without lending it undue significance as it is ultimately not without precedence and cannot be said to have permanently inflected its course.
“I Am Hiding from My Father/On the Roof of Joyce’s Tower”: The Father and Literary Precursor in Sharon Olds and Paul Durcan
This article focuses mainly on two poems that dramatize the figures of a poet and his father in a triangular relationship with a literary precursor. It examines how two writers, the American poet Sharon Olds and the Irish poet Paul Durcan, summon the tutelary presence of a literary forebear without giving in to the temptation of affiliating themselves exclusively with substitute fathers chosen among the great figures of literature, or seeming to fall prey to the pangs of influence anxiety.
\All that romantic taxidermy\: Derek Walcott's Caribbean bestiary
This article examines the genre of the bestiary poem in the context of Derek Walcott's work, using the theories of the French philosopher Michel Pecheux to explore the ways in which the related concepts of identification, counter-identification and dis-identification interact in Walcott's poetry to complex and sometimes ambiguous effect.
« I am hiding from my father/On the roof of Joyce's tower » : le père et le précurseur littéraire chez Sharon Olds et Paul Durcan
This article focuses mainly on two poems that dramatise the figures of a poet and his father in a triangular relationship with a literary precursor. It examines how two writers, the American poet Sharon Olds and the Irish poet Paul Durcan, summon the tutelary presence of a literary forebear without giving in to the temptation of affiliating themselves exclusively with substitute fathers chosen among the great figures of literature, or seeming to fall prey to the pangs of influence anxiety. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]