Results for 'Poetry as Topic '

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  1. Poetry as a topic of the practical-reflections on the aristotelian concept of poetry.Hg Schmitz - 1989 - Philosophisches Jahrbuch 96 (1):20-33.
     
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  2. “Sa clarte premiere”: Cataract removal as.Metaphor in Fourteenth-Century French Poetry - 2008 - Mediaevalia 29:67.
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  3. Maker theory?Propertied Objects as Truth-Makers - 2006 - In Paolo Valore (ed.), Topics on General and Formal Ontology. Polimetrica International Scientific Publisher.
     
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  4.  27
    The Mastery of Decorum: Politics as Poetry in Milton's Sonnets.Janel Mueller - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 13 (3):475-508.
    If we supply a missing connection in the master text of English Renaissance poetic theory, we can bring the dilemma posed by political poetry into sharp relief. Sidney’s Defence of Poesie seeks to confirm the supremacy of the poet’s power over human minds by invoking the celebrated three-way distinction between poetry, philosophy, and history in the Poetics. According to Sidney, the proper question to ask of poetry is not “whether it were better to have a particular act (...)
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  5.  23
    Philosophical Poetry: The Case of Four Quartets.Martin Warner - 1986 - Philosophy and Literature 10 (2):222-245.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Martin Warner PHILOSOPHICAL POETRY: THE CASE OF FOUR QUARTETS I FOR plato the quarrel between philosophy and poetry was already an ancient one. Since his day strenuous efforts have been made to eliminate it by circumscribing each widiin carefully specified boundaries, on die principle that strong fences make good neighbors, and allowing die one to venture onto the territory of the other only as licensed. Thus until (...)
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  6. Reading and company: embodiment and social space in silent reading practices.Anezka Kuzmicova, Patricia Dias, Ana Vogrincic Cepic, Anne-Mette Bech Albrechtslund, Andre Casado, Marina Kotrla Topic, Xavier Minguez Lopez, Skans Kersti Nilsson & Ines Teixeira-Botelho - 2018 - Literacy 52 (2):70–77.
    Reading, even when silent and individual, is a social phenomenon and has often been studied as such. Complementary to this view, research has begun to explore how reading is embodied beyond simply being ‘wired’ in the brain. This article brings the social and embodied perspectives together in a very literal sense. Reporting a qualitative study of reading practices across student focus groups from six European countries, it identifies an underexplored factor in reading behaviour and experience. This factor is the sheer (...)
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  7.  18
    Echoes of Baghdad’s Occupation by Mongols in Arabic Poetry: al-Kasīda al-Nūniya of Shamsaddīn al-Kūfī as an Example of City Dirge.Mücahit Küçüksari - 2020 - Cumhuriyet İlahiyat Dergisi 24 (3):1157-1176.
    One of the most rooted topics in Arabic poetry is the dirge. It shows that during the Jāhiliyya period, people lamented the dead at the graves and remembered their beautiful qualities. A similar situation continued in terms of content in the dirges that were said in the following periods. However, with the change of social, political and cultural conditions in time, there have been partial changes in the writing styles and purposes of the dirges. For example, the effects of (...)
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  8.  28
    The poetry of Emily Dickinson: philosophical perspectives.Elisabeth Camp (ed.) - 2020 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    One of America's most celebrated poets, Emily Dickinson was virtually unpublished in her lifetime. When a slim volume of her poems emerged on the American scene in 1890, her work created shockwaves that have not subsided yet. Famously precise and sparse, Emily Dickinson's poetry is often described as philosophical, both because her poetry grapples with philosophical topics like death, spirituality, and the darkening operations of the mind, and because she approaches those topics in a characteristically philosophical manner: analyzing (...)
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  9.  50
    What Is the Philosophy of Poetry?Peter Lamarque - 2017 - In Anja Weiberg & Stefan Majetschak (eds.), Aesthetics Today: Contemporary Approaches to the Aesthetics of Nature and of Arts. Proceedings of the 39th International Wittgenstein Symposium in Kirchberg. Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 109-126.
    It is only relatively recently that analytical philosophers have given special focus to poetry as a topic in its own right in aesthetics or as a semi-autonomous branch of the philosophy of literature. A new field is taking shape: the so-called Philosophy of Poetry. But do analytical philosophers have anything new to say on the topic? What kinds of issues or problems attract their attention? Rather than simply surveying the field, the paper looks at some emerging (...)
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  10.  1
    Rhythm and harmony in poetry and music.George Lansing Raymond - 1895 - New York: G. P. Putnam's sons.
    Rhythm and Harmony in Poetry and Music is an unchanged, high-quality reprint of the original edition of 1895. Hansebooks is editor of the literature on different topic areas such as research and science, travel and expeditions, cooking and nutrition, medicine, and other genres.As a publisher we focus on the preservation of historical literature.Many works of historical writers and scientists are available today as antiques only. Hansebooks newly publishes these books and contributes to the preservation of literature which has (...)
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  11.  91
    Conditionals: from philosophy to computer science.G. Crocco, Luis Fariñas del Cerro & Andreas Herzig (eds.) - 1995 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This book looks at the ways in which conditionals, an integral part of philosophy and logic, can be of practical use in computer programming. It analyzes the different types of conditionals, including their applications and potential problems. Other topics include defeasible logics, the Ramsey test, and a unified view of consequence relation and belief revision. Its implications will be of interest to researchers in logic, philosophy, and computer science, particularly artificial intelligence.
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  12.  17
    Ancient Hebrew and Ugaritic Poetry and Modern Linguistic Tools: An Interdisciplinary Study.Silviu Tatu - 2007 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 6 (17):47-68.
    This article introduces the reader to the issue of verbal sequence in the poetry of the Hebrew Bible, a topic that was studied in depth as a doctoral dissertation. After noticing the peculiarities of the poetic discourse, it surveys the solutions offered to this crux interpretum to date, but concludes that these solutions are insufficient. Several limitations of such a study are assumed from the outset. We confine ourselves to the Psalter for various reasons given below. Terminologically, we (...)
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  13.  17
    Turning to Poetry for Help—Some Desultory Remarks.Kelly Dean Jolley - 2019 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 53 (3):26-33.
    What follows is talky—I skitter across a number of difficult topics much too quickly and with little attempt to defend what I say. I may be able to add some defense later in discussion, but I don't promise anything much and certainly nothing fancy. I am still very much in the process of thinking about these topics, and I aim to do no more than to perhaps nudge you to think about them too.By "poetry" in what follows, I typically (...)
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  14.  4
    Plato Through Homer: Poetry and Philosophy in the Cosmological Dialogues.Planinc Zdravko - 2003 - University of Missouri.
    This new study challenges traditional ways of reading Plato by showing that his philosophy and political theory cannot be understood apart from a consideration of the literary or aesthetic features of his writing. More specifically, it shows how Plato’s well-known cosmological dialogues—the _Phaedrus, Timaeus, _and _Critias_—are structured using several books of the _Odyssey _as their shared source text. While there has recently been much scholarly discussion of the relation between poetry and philosophy in Plato’s dialogues, little of it addresses (...)
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  15.  19
    Vico’s Topical Conception of Civil Wisdom.Stephen Donatelli - 2002 - New Vico Studies 20:25-36.
    With the celebrated frontispiece to the New Science (1744) and through an immediate comparison of this image to the ancient moral fable inscribed in the Tablet of Cebes the Theban, Vico ingeniously employs a then well-known common topic and a conventional emblematic device to inaugurate his topics-based philosophy. A topical knowledge of the human cannot, for Vico, be seized by precept only; it must be undergone as an active and imaginative recovery of the topics through memory. In times of (...)
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  16.  51
    Why neanderthals hate poetry: A critical notice of Steven mithen's the prehistory of mind.John Sarnecki & Matthew Sponheimer - 2002 - Philosophical Psychology 15 (2):173 – 184.
    The significance of historical advances in human development has been widely debated within cognitive science. Steven Mithen's recent book, The prehistory of mind (London: Thames & Hudson, 1996), presents an archeologist's attempt to explain the details of cognitive development within the framework of modern anthropology and cognitive psychology. We argue that Mithen's attempt fails for a number of different reasons. The relationship between the archeological evidence he considers and his conclusions is problematic. We maintain that it is difficult to draw (...)
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  17.  14
    Pearls of Persia: the philosophical poetry of Nāṣir-i Khusraw.Alice C. Hunsberger (ed.) - 2012 - New York: in association with the Institute of Ismaili Studies.
    Nasir-i Khusraw is a major literary figure in medieval Persian culture. He was a Muslim philosopher, poet, travel writer, and Ismaili da'i who lived a thousand years ago in the lands known today as Afghanistan, Iran, and Tajikistan. Although known in the West mainly for his Safarnama, or travelogue, which describes his seven-year journey from Khurasan, in the eastern Islamic lands, to Cairo, the city of the Fatimid imam-caliphs, his poetry and ideas are less familiar. Yet, over the centuries, (...)
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  18.  9
    Democracy, Culture and the Voice of Poetry.Robert Pinsky - 2005 - Princeton University Press.
    The place of poetry in modern democracy is no place, according to conventional wisdom. The poet, we hear, is a casualty of mass entertainment and prosaic public culture, banished to the artistic sidelines to compose variations on insipid themes for a dwindling audience. Robert Pinsky, however, argues that this gloomy diagnosis is as wrongheaded as it is familiar. Pinsky, whose remarkable career as a poet itself undermines the view, writes that to portray poetry and democracy as enemies is (...)
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  19.  10
    Poetry as Research and as Therapy.Brian E. Wakeman - 2015 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 32 (1):50-68.
    The central questions addressed in this article are: 1) Can writing poetry be both a process, and a product of research? and 2) How can writing poetry be therapeutic to the writer and reader? The author has developed his own theories of poetry as research and poetry as therapy by action research into his writing. He argues that in thinking about the process of writing verse, he has come to see that some poetry is a (...)
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  20.  3
    Agents of uncertainty: Mysticism, scepticism, Buddhism, art and poetry.John Danvers (ed.) - 2012 - BRILL.
    Through an analysis of many different examples, Danvers articulates a new way of thinking about mysticism and scepticism, not as opposite poles of the philosophical spectrum, but as two fields of enquiry with overlapping aims and methods. Prompted by a deep sense of wonder at being alive, many mystics and sceptics, like the Buddha, practice disciplines of doubt in order to become free of attachment to fixed appearances, essences and viewpoints, and in doing so they find peace and equanimity. They (...)
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  21.  13
    Darwinism as Religion: What Literature Tells Us About Evolution.Michael Ruse - 2016 - Oxford University Press USA.
    The Darwinian Revolution--the change in thinking sparked by Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species, which argued that all organisms including humans are the end product of a long, slow, natural process of evolution rather than the miraculous creation of an all-powerful God--is one of the truly momentous cultural events in Western Civilization. Darwinism as Religion is an innovative and exciting approach to this revolution through creative writing, showing how the theory of evolution as expressed by Darwin has, from the (...)
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  22.  8
    Achilles from Homer to the Masters of Late Archaic Poetry, or: From pathos to Splendour.Annamaria Peri Scholar - forthcoming - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption.
    Philologus, founded in 1846, is one of the oldest and most respected periodicals in the field of Classics. It publishes articles on Greek and Latin literature, historiography, philosophy, history of religion, linguistics, reception, and the history of scholarship. The journal aims to contribute to our understanding of Greco-Roman culture and its lasting influence on European civilization. The journal Philologus, conceived as a forum for discussion among different methodological approaches to the study of ancient texts and their reception, publishes original scholarly (...)
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  23.  6
    Prayer as a Form of Life, Life as a Form of Prayer.Zofia Rosińska - 2023 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 7 (4):73-77.
    Preview: /Zofia Rosińska interviewed by Mikołaj Sławkowski-Rode/ MSR: Your book Po śladach. Doświadczenie modlitewne w ujęciu filozofii kultury [After the Traces. The Experience of Prayer in the Perspective of Philosophy of Culture] has an unusual format for an academic work. Apart from an overview and discussion of various conceptions and examples of prayer you have added an annex containing eight interviews with various people as well as five testimonials concerning the experience of prayer – some very intimate. What was the (...)
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  24.  30
    "Examples Are Best Precepts": Readers and Meanings in Seventeenth-Century Poetry.John M. Wallace - 1974 - Critical Inquiry 1 (2):273-290.
    My title is taken from the frontispiece to Ogilby's translation of Aesop ; since every Renaissance poet believed the statement to be true, let me start with my own example. John Denham's only play, The Sophy, published in August 1642, is a tale about the perils of jealousy. The good prince Mirza, after a miraculous victory over the Turks, returns in glory to his father's court, but leaves it shortly thereafter. In his absense, Haly, the evil courtier, follows a friend's (...)
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  25.  17
    The Significance of Spinoza and His Philosophy for the Life and Poetry of the German-Jewish Poetess Rose Ausländer [Spinoza und Seine Philosophie im Schaffen der Deutschsprachigen Dichterin Rose Ausländer].Maria Kłańska - 2011 - Forum Philosophicum: International Journal for Philosophy 16 (2):111-119.
    The German-Jewish writer and poetess, Rose Ausländer, who came from Chernivtsi, capital of Bukovina, one of the former provinces of the Hapsburg Empire, is one of the most highly acclaimed lyric poets to have written in German in the 20th century. Throughout her whole life she was an adherent of the philosophy of Spinoza, first becoming acquainted with it in the so-called “ethics seminar” of the secondary-school teacher Friedrich Kettner. In the wake of the First World War the youth of (...)
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  26.  45
    Poetry as Experience.Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe - 1999 - Stanford University Press.
    Lacoue-Labarthe's Poetry as Experience addresses the question of a lyric language that would not be the expression of subjectivity. In his analysis of the historical position of Paul Celan's poetry, Lacoue-Labarthe defines the subject as the principle that founds, organizes, and secures both cognition and action—a principle that turned, most violently during the twentieth century, into a figure not only of domination but of the extermination of everything other than itself. This thoroughly universal, abstract, and finally suicidal subject (...)
  27.  23
    Homer as Artist.Anne Amory Parry - 1971 - Classical Quarterly 21 (01):1-.
    Homeric studies today are flourishing, but admirers of Homer as poetry are a rather baffled lot. Homerists may devote themselves to Linear B, Mycenaean warfare and weaponry, formulary modifications, linguistic features, Yugoslav parallels, and other such topics; but anyone who prefers to concentrate on Homer himself and offers an interpretation of some part of the Iliad or Odyssey is liable to meet with the rejoinder that literary standards must not be applied to an oral poet.
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  28.  19
    Book Review: The Age of Grace: "Charis" in Early Greek Poetry[REVIEW]Dana R. Smith - 1995 - Philosophy and Literature 19 (1):172-173.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Age of Grace: “Charis” in Early Greek PoetryDana R. SmithThe Age of Grace: “Charis” in Early Greek Poetry, by Bonnie MacLachlan; xxi & 192 pp. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1992, $29.95.Bonnie MacLachlan has two concerns in this book. First, she sees early charis, conventionally and inadequately translated as “grace,” as the result of feeling, concrete action, and sometimes concrete objects, fused in such a way that (...)
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  29. Poetry as Dark Precursor: Nietzschean Poetics in Deleuze's "Literature and Life".Joshua M. Hall - 2018 - Philosophy Today 62 (1):235-251.
    The present article utilizes the Nietzschean “poetics” distilled from Nietzsche’s Gay Science as an interpretive strategy for considering Deleuze’s essay “Literature and Life” in Essays Critical and Clinical. The first section considers Deleuze’s overarching project in that essay, and then repositions his thought from literature in general to “poetry” in particular, indicating both resonances between Deleuze’s understanding of “literature” and Nietzsche’s understanding of “poetry” as well as their dissonances. The second section focuses on the places in Deleuze’s analyses (...)
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  30.  14
    Listening to Pictures: A Review of Peter Steele’s The Whispering Gallery: Art into Poetry; Melbourne, Macmillan, 2006, 128 pp., ISBN: 1876832851, hb. [REVIEW]Patrick Hutchings - 2007 - Sophia 46 (2):193-198.
    A review of Peter Steele’s: The Whispering Gallery: Art into Poetry, in which Steele writes poems on and to paintings and the sculpture Black Sun (By Inge King) in the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia. Each work on which there is a poem is reproduced. In this book Steele writes more to the ‘contour’ of the topic-work than he did in Plenty. His poems – as ever sidenoted – are tensed between the topicality of the work of (...)
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  31.  7
    Lyric Poetry as Religious Language.Louis Z. Hammer - 1963 - The Monist 47 (3):401-416.
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  32.  13
    Poetry as a Resource for Worship in the Lenten Season.Richard Griffiths - 2010 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 64 (1):44.
    This essay examines the suitability of poetry as a vehicle for prayer, worship and meditation. It takes two specific examples of Lenten courses based on poetry: one based on depictions of the events of Holy Week and one based on a discussion of the problem of suffering in a world created by a loving God. It also looks at the liturgical use of the arts in Holy Week services.
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  33. Poetry as the historical essence of language: an essay on the poetics of Martin Heidegger.Dilip Naik - 1989 - Bhubaneswar: Post Graduate Dept. of English, Utkal University.
     
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  34.  22
    Poetry as Experience.Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe & Roxanne Lapidus - 1989 - Substance 18 (3):22.
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  35.  22
    Poetry as a cross-cultural analysis and sensitizing tool in design.Patrizia Marti & E. B. Van der Houwen - 2019 - AI and Society 34 (3):545-558.
    The overall trend toward globalization in design, greatly enhanced by digital technologies, has raised issues and challenges on how to preserve the cultural differences and values of different societies. There is a tendency to lose touch with local cultural values when designing artefacts for global use, and social nuances and traditions risk to be flattened or stereotyped in the pursuit of developing new technologies and products for the global society. Attempts to reduce the tension between the global and the local (...)
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  36.  21
    Poetry as the Naming of the Gods.Phyllis Zagano - 1989 - Philosophy and Literature 13 (2):340-349.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:POETRY AS THE NAMING OF THE GODS by Phyllis Zagano There have been many attempts to define poetry, and there is copious advice to would-be poets. Horace writes somewhere "Sit quod vis, simplex dumtaxat et unum" which can be comfortably rendered as "make anything at all, so long as it hangs together." The hanging together is the quality most writers point to as evidence of success: simply, (...)
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  37.  26
    Poetry as a Form of Knowledge.Christian Martin - 2016 - SATS 17 (2):159-184.
    Name der Zeitschrift: SATS Jahrgang: 17 Heft: 2 Seiten: 159-184.
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  38. Poetry as a key for healthcare.G. Boulton - forthcoming - Medical Humanities.
     
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  39.  26
    Poetry as right-hemispheric language.Julie Kane - 2004 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 11 (5-6):5-6.
    The human brain is divided into two hemispheres, right and left, that are joined by a thick ‘cable’ of neural fibres called the corpus callosum. It has long been observed that injury to the left hemisphere in the average adult damages speech, speech comprehension, and reading, and causes paralysis on the right side of the body. Injury to the right hemisphere, on the other hand, seems to leave linguistic capabilities intact, but causes paralysis on the left side of the body. (...)
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  40.  6
    Poetry as (a Kind of) Philosophy.Christopher Norris - 2020 - In Alan Malachowski (ed.), A companion to Rorty. Hoboken: Wiley. pp. 505–527.
    Taking his cue from Wallace Steven's claim that poetry now replaces religion as “life's redemption” and Heidegger's insistence that “the distinction between ‘theoretical’ and ‘poetical’ cannot be applied to philosophical texts”, Richard Rorty celebrated the poetic potential of philosophy. In this prologue, Christopher Norris pays Rorty the compliment of taking his views on the nature and importance of poetry seriously enough to offer an engaging commentary on Rorty's work in poetic form.
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  41.  7
    Poetry as a Subversion of Narratives in Heideger.Pol Vandevelde - 1998 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 72:239-254.
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  42.  23
    Poetry as self-cultivation: Neo-confucianism in Van yu and Gao Bing.Richard John Lynn - 2004 - Wisdom in China and the West 22:215.
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  43. Poetry as a Dialogue between Languages'.Peter Mackridge, Dionisio Salamon & Aiovuaioc ZoXcouoc - unknown
     
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  44.  43
    Poetry as a Fine Art.Sister M. Madeleva - 1963 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 38 (1):56-62.
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  45.  2
    Poetry as Discourse, by Antony Easthope.Michael Stone - 1985 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 16 (2):211-212.
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  46.  19
    Poetry as Thought and Action: Mazzini's Reflections on Byron.Lilla Maria Crisafulli - 2012 - History of European Ideas 38 (3):387-398.
    Summary This article opens with a brief introduction to Giuseppe Mazzini, with particular reference to his commitment to republicanism, an ideal that would be fulfilled in Italy only after considerable time and with great difficulty. It then focuses on Mazzini's critical reception of Byron. Although Giuseppe Mazzini and Percy Bysshe Shelley would have allowed a more obvious comparison, it was Byron who really attracted Mazzini's attention and criticism. Mazzini uses Byron, on the one hand, as a means to demonstrate that (...)
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  47. Poetry as Philosophy: for Richard Rorty.Christopher Norris - 2014 - Philosophy Pathways 186 (1).
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  48. Poetry as Literary Criticism.Michael O'Neill - 1999 - In David Fuller & Patricia Waugh (eds.), The Arts and Sciences of Criticism. Oxford University Press.
     
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  49.  34
    Poetry as Panacea: Mill on the Moral Rewards of Aesthetic Experience.Bryan Parkhurst - 2013 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 47 (2):16-34.
    In chapter 5 of his Autobiography, John Stuart Mill recounts a crisis in his mental history. The details of Mill’s depression and eventual rehabilitation due to the salutary powers of lyric poetry are well known. But most scholars who have investigated the status of poetry in Mill’s philosophy have overlooked the fact that the story the Autobiography tells about poetry’s contribution to Mill’s spiritual convalescence and moral education raises several interesting interpretive issues and leaves many notable questions (...)
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  50.  44
    The Πολιτικὸς Στίχος poetry as reliable evidence of linguistic phenomena.Jorie Soltic - 2013 - Byzantinische Zeitschrift 106 (2):811-842.
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