Studying PoetryA&C Black, 17.10.2011 - 208 Seiten Studying Poetry is a fun, concise and helpful guide to understanding poetry which is divided into three parts, form and meaning, critical approaches and interpreting poetry, all of which help to illuminate the beauty and validity of poetry using a wide variety of examples, from Dylan Thomas to Bob Dylan. |
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Seite 2
... sense of ourselves and of our engagement with the world and with each other. Lorde was responding to a remark that in any struggle for liberation, poetry is a luxury and only activism matters. Focusing on the feminist movement of the ...
... sense of ourselves and of our engagement with the world and with each other. Lorde was responding to a remark that in any struggle for liberation, poetry is a luxury and only activism matters. Focusing on the feminist movement of the ...
Seite 3
... sense of completion at the end of the poem , here reflecting on the completion of a life , the sense of an ending . The use of parallelism also adds intensely to this . Parallelism is the modulated repetition of syntax , and is very ...
... sense of completion at the end of the poem , here reflecting on the completion of a life , the sense of an ending . The use of parallelism also adds intensely to this . Parallelism is the modulated repetition of syntax , and is very ...
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... sense that all poetry can be read with critical self-consciousness, from the most apparently simple nursery-rhymes to the dauntingly complex experimental work which we discuss in the closing chapter. Critical self- consciousness is not ...
... sense that all poetry can be read with critical self-consciousness, from the most apparently simple nursery-rhymes to the dauntingly complex experimental work which we discuss in the closing chapter. Critical self- consciousness is not ...
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... sense of their condition , to give shape and more importantly form to otherwise inchoate , inartic- ulate sensibilities . This is a major component in what we identify throughout the book as the dominant Romantic approach which ...
... sense of their condition , to give shape and more importantly form to otherwise inchoate , inartic- ulate sensibilities . This is a major component in what we identify throughout the book as the dominant Romantic approach which ...
Seite 6
... sense still there ... It is no use pretending that Kipling's view of life , as a whole , can be accepted or even forgiven by any civilized person ... Kipling is a jingo imperialist , he is morally insensitive and aesthetically ...
... sense still there ... It is no use pretending that Kipling's view of life , as a whole , can be accepted or even forgiven by any civilized person ... Kipling is a jingo imperialist , he is morally insensitive and aesthetically ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
aesthetic Annus Mirabilis anthology Auden ballad Blake called canon certainly Chapter Charles Bernstein Collected Poems concrete poetry context couplet critical cultural death Dryden Dylan edited elegy emotion English epic essay example exists experience Ezra Pound fact figure formal genre Harmondsworth Highway 61 Revisited historical I.A. Richards iambic pentameters ideas ideology interpretation intertextuality John Keats Keats's kind language letters literary literature London Lowell lyric meaning metaphor metre metrical Milton modern narrative object Oxford Paradise Lost Paul Muldoon Philip Larkin Plath poem's poet poetic form political prose reader reading poetry reading the poem rhyme rhythm Robert Robert Lowell Romantic Romanticism Salter and Stallworthy sense significant sincerity song sonnet Stallworthy 2005 suggests syllables symbol T.S. Eliot Tate theory things tion tradition twentieth century understanding verse villanelle W.B. Yeats W.H. Auden W.K. Wimsatt William Carlos Williams words Wordsworth writing written wrote Yeats