Showing 1,781 - 1,800 results of 6,205 for search '"Poets ', query time: 0.09s Refine Results
  1. 1781

    PLACE NAMES IN KADI BURHANEDDIN’S POETRY by Nevzat Özkan

    Published 2018-06-01
    “…Although Kadı Burhaneddin was a poet and a statesman who lived in the Central Anatolia, his fame spread beyond the boundaries of Anatolia, and he made great contributions to establishing the Turkish Language as a written language in the whole Anatolia, the Balkans and the Caucasus. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  2. 1782

    Abitare la parola “ecologia”. L’ottica postantropocentrica di Antonella Anedda by Justyna Hanna Orzeł, Hanna Serkowska

    Published 2022-09-01
    “…After mentioning some of the most relevant concepts and ideas connected with these lively approaches in interdisciplinary studies, it presents a brief and deliberately ongoing introduction to an outline of observations on the poet’s production, considering the key eco-categories such as animals, plants and space.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  3. 1783

    Juan Bañuelos and Abigael Bohórquez: Poetry as Resistance and Social Representation by Gerardo Bustamante Bermúdez

    Published 2016-06-01
    “…This article studies poems by Mexican poets Juan Bañuelos and Abigal Bohórquez who, in addition to friendship, shared thematic affinities and concerns relating to the tumultuous national and international contexts of the 1960s and 1970s. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  4. 1784

    Ten Poems from Spotlight on the Word by Astrid Cabral, Alexis Levitin

    Published 2020-10-01
    “…Astrid Cabral is a leading poet and environmentalist from the Amazonian region of Brazil. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  5. 1785

    Lacanian "Gaze" in John Keats’s "The Eve of St. Agnes": A Romance of Resistance by Shafigheh Keivan

    Published 2020-01-01
    “…Agnes" is one of Keats’s most challenging poems when it comes to the poet’s emotions and beliefs on social structures, life, death, men, and women. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 1786

    Wiener vs. Berliner Moderne. Die kompetitive “Dichterfreundschaft” zwischen Arthur Schnitzler und Richard Dehmel by Julia Ilgner

    Published 2021-06-01
    “…The following article reconstructs the almost 25-year-long relationship between the two fin de siècle poets Arthur Schnitzler and Richard Dehmel. The analysis is based on the assumption that the rival “artist friendship” is determined by a constitutive generic competition. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  7. 1787

    Wczesna korespondencja Auzoniusza z Paulinem z Noli by Tatiana Krynicka

    Published 2016-07-01
    “…The exchange of letters provided to the famous befriended poets an opportunity to participate in the jolly literary games and to share mutual respect, admiration and love. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  8. 1788

    Emotive connotations of the “big city” concept in the language of the Argentines by Yu. A. Larikova

    Published 2018-03-01
    “…On the basis of texts of two contemporary poets, Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986) and Oliverio Girondo (1891-1967), the emotive semantics of words belonging to the Argentinian variety of Spanish, specifically actualized in poetic speech acts is analyzed.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  9. 1789

    Entre noésis et praxis: le renouveau de la prise de parole poétique en RDC au début du nouveau millénaire by Silvia Riva

    Published 2016-11-01
    “…The reflections proposed in these pages are not limited to the presentation of some Congolese intellectuals and their works - poets, filmmakers and musicians who live in the country or elsewhere, speaking in French, but also in some local or world languages. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  10. 1790

    «Hórrido yermo de inflamada arena». Cienfuegos and Romantic Cosmic Pain by Russell P. SEBOLD

    Published 2011-01-01
    “…It was painful to be a journalist and poet with noble aspirations for reform during the reign of Charles IV. in the years immediately preceding, nine well known Spanish poets had already expressed in romantic form their deep anxiety and insecurity regarding the universe in which they dwelt. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  11. 1791

    Translations and Imitations of the Shahnameh in Turkish Lands by Hasan Javadi

    Published 2024-06-01
    “…Ferdowsi, like many other poets of Iran, had considerable influence on the Ottoman literature. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  12. 1792

    The Fox as a Dying Hero: An Edition and Translation of the Late Medieval Icelandic Poem Skaufalabálkur by Haukur Þorgeirsson, William Sayers

    Published 2023-11-01
    “…The work is traditionally connected with poets working at or near Skarð in Western-Iceland in the 15th century and we argue here that the language of the poem is consistent with that dating. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  13. 1793

    Los gitanos en la España del siglo XV y su vinculación a Hungría by István Szászdi

    Published 2016-11-01
    “…It is taken for granted that the Gipsy element is the essence of Spanish culture which has inspired poets and musicians. Such is a mistake. Six hundred years ago they crossed Europe following the routes of religious pilgrimage, wandering as pennants and victims of the Turks. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  14. 1794

    Dante, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and Their Verbal/Visual Personae by Paola Spinozzi

    Published 2022-06-01
    “…The New Life (La Vita Nuova), published in The Early Italian Poets from Ciullo D’Alcamo to Dante Alighieri (1100-1200-1300) (1847-48, published 1861) and the innumerable sketches, drawings, and paintings he dedicated to Dante generate connections between two different epochs and cultural areas. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  15. 1795

    Danijela Hliš and her new collection of verse Hideaway serenade (1996) by Igor Maver

    Published 1997-01-01
    “…She feels at home in Australia, accepting its positive and negative sides, and considers it a second (home)land, like some other Slovene migrant poets living in the land of Oz. Danijela Hliš is probably the first poet to be included in a major secondary school textbook, which brings her to the Australian literary limelight and mainstream.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  16. 1796

    Słownictwo nacechowane emocjonalnie w poematach romantycznych by Edward Stachurski

    Published 2019-12-01
    “…The article presents a great number of emotional words in 8 romantic poems by 7 poets. The collection contains almost 1100 words, among which dominate negative words. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  17. 1797

    Słowacki na uniwersytecie by Zbigniew Jędrychowski

    Published 2016-06-01
    “…The article fills some gaps concerning the poet’s student life. Thanks to discovering a copy of the diploma, the mark transcript and some information concerning the completion of studies, the author has been able to determine which students of the Faculty of Moral and Political Sciences received a monetary prize, who was awarded an honorable mention, what the subject of Słowacki’s final paper was and when Słowacki left Vilnius for good.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  18. 1798

    Rummaging Through the Ashes: 9/11 American Poetry and the Transcultural Counterwitness by Matthew Moran

    “…The notion of the transcultural counterwitness has the potential to redefine how third-party witnesses, like poets, provide new understandings of historical responsibility and national identity in the American imagination.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  19. 1799

    La poésie du métissage et du rapprochement comme arme contre la politique de l’exclusion : Georges Henein et Jean Sénac by Youssef Ferdjani

    Published 2020-06-01
    “…Georges Henein and Jean Sénac are two committed poets who establish a link between East and West. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  20. 1800

    Les nits incendiades. Alquímia i representació en la poesia de Palau i Fabre by Sergi Álvarez Riosalido

    Published 2019-12-01
    “…Alchemy could summon up a reality far from any judgment that determines things through clear-cut distinctions; therefore, the poet’s responsibility –the duty of the writer who takes charge of the language– would consist in upholding this legacy that surpasses the everyday, immediate reality.…”
    Get full text
    Article