912 resultados para Poets laureate.
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This monograph demonstrates that aesthetic and ontological anxieties continue to find diverse expression within the contrived textual artifice of the bucolic space. Drawing upon expansive definitions of the Hispanic literary Baroque, (Beverley, 1980, 2008, Echevarría 1993, Ross 1993, Chemris 2008 , Egido 2009 ) the study analyses the pastoral verse of representative poets of the period to demonstrate that they re-enter an Arcadia that has been defamiliarized but is nonetheless inexorably connected to the classical origins of the mode. Pastoral, in common with other literary forms, is subject to a process of re-evaluation which was latent in its classical legacy. Within the intricacies of this literary construct, surface artistry sustains an effect of artless innocence that is vibrantly contested across the secular, sacred, parodic and colonial text.
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The group known as the Ocho Poetas Mexicanos were marginalised in post-revolutionary literary circles and remain largely forgotten by literary history because they were dismissed as Catholic authors by a literary establishment which favoured nation-building literature at a time when Catholicism was excluded from official constructions of nationhood. This article draws attention to the significant contribution made by group members to contemporary cultural life and re-evaluates the work they published in the 1955 anthology which announced their arrival onto the literary scene. An analysis of this collection demonstrates that there was scant justification for labelling the group as Catholic poets and suggests that they are best understood with reference to the “universal” strand of Mexican literature and as heirs to groups such as the Contemporáneos. The treatment of the Ocho Poetas provides important evidence of the way in which Catholic authors were marginalised in mid-twentieth century Mexico, even if they did not express religious beliefs in their work, and draws attention to the non-literary criteria which can come into play when evaluating texts.
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This chapter examines the ramifications of continental travel and associated epistolary communication for English poets of the period. It argues that recourse to neo-Latin, the universal language of diplomacy, served not only to establish a sense of shared space—linguistic, cultural, generic—between England and the continent, but also to signal self-conscious differences (climatic, geographical, historical, political) between England and her continental peers. Through an investigation of a range of ‘performances’ on stages that were ‘academic’, poetic, autobiographical, and epistolographic, it assesses the central role of neo-Latin as a language that underwent a series of textual itineraries. These ‘itineraries’ manifest themselves in a number of ways. Neo-Latin as a shared linguistic medium can facilitate, and quite uniquely so, intertextual engagement with the classics, but now ancient Rome, its language, its mythology, its hierarchy of genres, are viewed through a seventeenth-century lens and appropriated by poets in both England and Italy to describe contemporary events, whether personal, or political. Close examination of the neo-Latin poetry of Milton and Marvell reveals, it is argued, a self-fashioning coloured by such textual itineraries and interchanges. The absorption and replication of continental literary and linguistic methodologies (the academic debate; the etymological play of Marinism; the hybridity of neo-Latin and Italian voices) reveal in short a linguistic and textual reciprocity that gave birth to something very new.
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The late Michael Allen was a member of the famous Belfast Group, and one of the most authoritative critical voices on poetry from Northern Ireland, intimately part of the North’s poetic movement since the early 1960s. He taught at Queen’s University, where he was a colleague of Seamus Heaney and tutor to poets such as Paul Muldoon and Medbh McGuckian. Seamus Heaney called him ‘the reader over my shoulder’. Close Readings brings together interlinked critical writings which have crucially influenced approaches to Irish poetry during the last forty years. The book ends with an extended essay, hitherto unpublished: ‘Doubles, Twins and the Feminine: Development in the Poetry of Michael Longley’.
Close Readings contains a Foreword by Fran Brearton, which relates Michael Allen’s essays to continuing critical and cultural debates. Edna Longley’s Afterword offers a personal view of Allen’s involvement with poetry in Belfast.
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Among the most veiled and emotionally charged of life’s experiences are those related to death. Given that poetry has long been recognized as an unparalleled means of expressing and understanding the most complex and emotional aspects of life (Sherry and Schouten, 2002), it is of little surprise that few poets regarded as the finest of all wordsmiths have not, since time immemorial, grappled with death.
Recently, within marketing and consumer research, poetry has slowly but progressively come to be recognized as a means by which to understand, express, celebrate, and/or confront that which defies scientific or other more “scholarly” explanation (Canniford, 2012; Wijland, 2011; Sherry and Schouten, 2002). This “poetic turn” has manifest itself most notably within the nascent realm of Consumer Culture Theory (CCT); mainly in poetry reading sessions held—with published chapbooks in hand—in concurrence with the annual CCT symposium. Death-related poetry penned by marketing and consumer researchers has there entered—albeit randomly—the CCT circuit (see, for example: Arnould, 2014; Steinfield, 2014; Gabel, 2013, 2010; Downey, 2011, 2010a, 2010b, 2010c).
This chapter represents the first formal, organized attempt to better understand death-related consumption experience and meaning via the creation and dissemination of original works of poetry. The chapter’s title reflects the broad, eclectic perspective of death and consumption herein pursued. We consider funerary and other—good, service, and ideological—product consumption activities and experiences transpiring in the context of death. We also embrace the notion that death often brutally consumes those dealing with it; a sort of “consumption of consumers by death.” In turn, as vividly expressed in several of the poems in this chapter, consumption acts or experiences and/or memories thereof may be instrumental in coping with “being consumed by death.”
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O século I, que desabrochou numa Idade de Ouro, não findaria sob o signo da boa Fortuna inaugurada pelo primeiro Princeps. O século de Augusto conheceria o seu fim! A Literatura não pôde furtar-se ao fatum de todo um Império e, depois de 69, juntamente com a Magna Vrbs, aguardava um tempo que fosse, finalmente, capaz de uma renovação. Para os anos oitenta do século I, prometiam os Flavianos e as suas consecuções uma nova Aurea Aetas… Porém, revelou-se impossível recuperar o passado: então, como nunca antes, os abastados demandavam a púrpura e a populaça clamava por panem et circenses. E a mudança definitiva dos tempos tinha na produção artística das suas maiores provas — a clientela condenara os autores ao abandono! Longe os círculos de Mecenas, apoiando Horácios e Virgílios que podiam abraçar em exclusivo a sua arte… Marcus Valerius Martialis foi não apenas um autor cuja existência se ressentiria dos constrangimentos que esta época reservou aos poetas, como o que faria da sua obra o mais fiel espelho do seu tempo. Aliás, não fora a sua obra e não se compreenderia cabalmente como foi possível a um escritor sobreviver a esses tempos e trazer à luz o seu trabalho — a uma luz muito especial, na verdade: Hic est quem legis ille, quem requiris, / toto notus in orbe Martialis (1.1.1-2)! Para cantar o novo Império e o seu quotidiano, onde conviviam, a um tempo, a grandeza e a torpeza, nada melhor que uma rude auena, jocosa e mordaz... O epigrama, não a epopeia, era a nova voz de Roma! E Marcial, elevando a sua auena, aplicou toda a sua mestria na celebração da sua Roma e dos Romanos seus concidadãos — hominem pagina nostra sapit (10.4.10). Teremos nós perdido um épico talentoso que se devotou e à sua arte a um género menor ou teremos ganho um cantor ímpar que viveu em perfeita harmonia com o seu tempo? Alcançando a imortalidade, reservada, antes, para os épicos, Marcial alcançou o seu objetivo: si […] / [...] fas est cineri me superesse meo (7.44.7- 8). E, no entanto, o feito singular de Marcial foi dar cumprimento às suas palavras — angusta cantare licet uidearis auena, / dum tua multorum uincat auena tubas. (8.3.21-22) —, escrevendo, sob a forma de epigramas, a primeira e, talvez, a única epopeia do quotidiano!
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Tese de mestrado, Arte, Património e Teoria do Restauro, Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Letras, 2011
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Tese de mestrado, Estudos Clássicos, Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Letras, 2011
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Tese de doutoramento, Filosofia (Filosofia em Portugal), Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Letras, 2014
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Tese de doutoramento, Estudos de Literatura e de Cultura (Teoria da Literatura), Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Letras, 2014
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Tese de doutoramento, História e Filosofia das Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Ciências, 2014
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This paper is a summary of an evaluation of the first two years of a three year poetry project for older people with dementia. The project was set up with a poet in residence who mentored six poets to deliver poetry activities to older people and those with dementia in residential and care homes in Herefordshire. The project was developed and run by the Courtyards Hereford. The evaluation was undertake through the use of questionnaires that were given to staff and carers undertaking training workshops and the poets, staff and carers in the homes who facilitated the activities and finally by the residents who took part in the project. The main findings were that participants that responded to the questionnaire for staff and carers it had increased confidence and assisted them in gaining more knowledge about the residents, whilst for residents it had a number of positive effects including enhanced communication, increased self-esteem and enhanced self-worth whilst making them feel less isolated.
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Tese de doutoramento, Estudos de Literatura e de Cultura (Estudos de Literatura e de Cultura de Expressão Alemão), Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Letras, 2016
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Dissertação apresentada com vista à obtenção do grau de Mestre em Tradução e Interpretação Especializada. Instituto Politécnico do Porto (Portaria nº 602/2003 de 21 Julho)