Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Series TitleSeries Title
-
Reading LevelReading Level
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersContent TypeItem TypeIs Full-Text AvailableSubjectPublisherSourceDonorLanguagePlace of PublicationContributorsLocation
Done
Filters
Reset
2,409
result(s) for
"Truth Poetry."
Sort by:
Telling the Truth Slant: The Poetry of Seamus Heaney
by
O'Brien, Eugene
in
first four volumes, Death of a Naturalist, Door into the Dark, Wintering Out, and North
,
Heaney's point, that Dante's Purgatorio ‐ immensly influenced his work, relationship between poetry and politics
,
Heaney's The Redress of Poetry, visual image ‐ of complicated truth of poetry in his structure called the quincunx
2010
This chapter contains sections titled:
References and Further Reading
Book Chapter
El corazón lisiado
by
Santiago Mútis Durán
in
poesía, corazón, herida, verdad, catástrofe, rebelión, salvación, Poésie, coeur, blessure, vérité, catastrophe, rébellion, salut, poetry, heart, wound, truth, catastrophe, rebellion, salvation
2012
En “tiempos de guerra, la primera víctima es la verdad”, y el habla. La guerra de rapiña que vive el país ha envilecido el lenguaje, las palabras, el “alma”. Con esas mismas palabras, que hoy deben ocultar la voracidad y el crimen, deben también escribir los poetas, los novelistas, los profesores. ¿Cómo hacerlo? A esto responde este escrito. Résumé En temps de guerre, la vérité est la première victime,… et la parole. Le langage, l’âme, les mots, s’avilissent du fait de la guerre du pillage en Colombie. Ce n’est qu’avec les mêmes mots qu’aujourd’hui cherchent à receler la voracité et le crime, que les poètes, les écrivains, les enseignants doivent écrire. Comment le faire ? Cet écrit essai d’y répondre. Abstract In “times of war, the first victim is the truth”, as well as speech. The war of plunder the country is experiencing has vilified the language, the words, the soul itself. Yet poets, novelists, and professors have to use, in order to write, the same words that currently hide voracity and crime. The article questions how they could possibly do so.
Journal Article
Testimony
by
Stepakoff, Shanee
,
Cole, Ernest D
in
Sierra Leone-History-Civil War, 1991-2002-Personal narratives-Poetry
,
Sierra Leone-History-Civil War, 1991-2002-Poetry
,
War crime trials
2021
IBPA Benjamin Franklin Award(tm) gold winner, poetry category Sierra Leone's devastating civil war barely caught the attention of Western media, but it raged on for over a decade, bringing misery to millions of people in West Africa from 1991 to 2002.
Herzog and Auteurism
by
Peucker, Brigitte
in
Adorno's The Jargon of Authenticity, its relevance to Herzog's filmmaking
,
authenticity veiled in mysticism, residing in “the real” of the body
,
critical approaches and contexts
2012
This chapter contains sections titled:
Authenticity: Ecstatic Truth and Physical Investment
Theatricality and Identity
Self‐parody
Notes
Works Cited
Book Chapter
Poet is at it Again; \Dr. Uplift\ Richardson releases a first book that is sure to spin controversy
Philadelphia, PA - The man who once wrote, \"You're not cute, but you're not completely vomit,\" to a woman seeking advice on her aesthetics, is at it again! Advice columnist, Lamar \"Dr. Uplift\" Richardson just released his first book, Our Truth: A Forthright Poetry Compilation. The poetry anthology geared towards the urban community features over ninety poems. Hate him or love him, Dr. [Uplift] doesn't care. \"I was put on this earth to help people by telling them the truth, and as cliche as it might sound, the truth often hurts,\" he says. Sitting in his high-rise apartment building in New Jersey City, Uplift states, \"I am extremely blessed to be able to touch so many lives, its not something I take lightly.\"
Newspaper Article
Selfwolf
1999
In his third book of poems, Mark Halliday grapples with the endless struggle between self-concern and awareness of the rights of others. Through humor, ironic twists, and refreshing candor, these poems confront a variety of situations—death, divorce, artistic egotism and envy, personal relationships—where the very idea of self is under siege.