Poetic Sphere

Poetic Sphere

Author:

Publisher: wordsmith publisher

Published: 2022-08-21

Total Pages: 74

ISBN-13: 9356165041

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This book is compiled by Ruchi Kumari. The “POETIC SPHERE” is a collection of wide range of poems written by different writers. As the book title THE POETIC SPHERE itself says it’s a world of poems where writers expresses their views about the life and surrounding circumstances through the poem and reach out the soul of the readers. This book is the best gift it to read. POETIC SPHERE book is published for the readers who love to read variety poems of different writers.


Book-Men, Book Clubs, and the Romantic Literary Sphere

Book-Men, Book Clubs, and the Romantic Literary Sphere

Author: Ina Ferris

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2015-08-29

Total Pages: 192

ISBN-13: 1137367601

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This book re-reads the tangled relations of book culture and literary culture in the early nineteenth century by restoring to view the figure of the bookman and the effaced history of his book clubs. As outliers inserting themselves into the matrix of literary production rather than remaining within that of reception, both provoked debate by producing, writing, and circulating books in ways that expanded fundamental points of literary orientation in lateral directions not coincident with those of the literary sphere. Deploying a wide range of historical, archival and literary materials, the study combines the history and geography of books, cultural theory, and literary history to make visible a bookish array of alterative networks, genres, and locations that were obscured by the literary sphere in establishing its authority as arbiter of the modern book.


Arnold's Poetic Landscapes

Arnold's Poetic Landscapes

Author: Alan Roper

Publisher: JHU Press

Published: 2019-12-01

Total Pages: 297

ISBN-13: 1421430991

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Originally published in 1969. Alan Roper studies the degree to which Arnold achieved a unity of human significance and literal landscape. If landscape poetry is to rise above the level of what Roper calls "country contentments in verse," the poet cannot think and describe alternately; his thinking and describing must be a part of one another. That Matthew Arnold was aware of the difficulty in achieving the necessary unity becomes clear in his own criticism, which Roper examines along with a large and representative number of Arnold's poems. Considering the latter roughly in the order they were published—except for a fuller analysis of Empedocles on Etna, "The Scholar-Gipsy," and "Thyrsis"—Roper follows important changes in Arnold's view of the function and nature of poetry as it emerged in the poems themselves. Basic to the author's critical method is a distinction between geographical sites and poetic landscapes. Focusing on the ways that Arnold and, to a lesser extent, the Augustan and Romantic poets before him untied thought and description, Roper adds a critical dimension to Arnold scholarship. Concerned not with the development of Arnold's ideas nor with their sources in classical antiquity and the Romantic period, he considers Arnold a self-conscious poet who, though sometimes successful, became increasingly unsuccessful in his efforts to imbue a landscape with meaning for individual or social man.


Literary Criticism in Antiquity

Literary Criticism in Antiquity

Author: J. W. H. Atkins

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2021-05-18

Total Pages: 305

ISBN-13: 1000379396

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Originally published in 1934, this book contains the second volume of Atkins' 'sketch' of the development of ancient literary criticism. Atkins concludes his history with a look at the styles of literary criticism prevalent after the rise of the Roman Empire, and includes the responses of figures such as Cicero, Tacitus and Lucian to changes in the literature of their day.


Alchemy in Contemporary Art

Alchemy in Contemporary Art

Author: Urszula Szulakowska

Publisher: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.

Published: 2011

Total Pages: 248

ISBN-13: 9780754667360

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Alchemy in Contemporary Art analyzes how twentieth-century artists, beginning with French Surrealists of the 1920s, have appropriated concepts and imagery from the western alchemical tradition. Examining artistic production from ca. 1920 to the present, with an emphasis on artistic on the 1970s to 2000, the author discusses the work of familiar as well as lesser known artists to provide a critical, theorized overview of the alchemical tradition in 20th-century art.