Subjects -> LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE (Total: 2147 journals)
    - LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE (954 journals)
    - LANGUAGES (276 journals)
    - LITERARY AND POLITICAL REVIEWS (201 journals)
    - LITERATURE (GENERAL) (180 journals)
    - NOVELS (13 journals)
    - PHILOLOGY AND LINGUISTICS (500 journals)
    - POETRY (23 journals)

POETRY (23 journals)

Showing 1 - 16 of 16 Journals sorted alphabetically
Brill Research Perspectives in Classical Poetry     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 2)
Calíope : Journal of the Society for Renaissance and Baroque Hispanic Poetry     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 1)
Dictynna     Open Access   (Followers: 2)
Mawlana Rumi Review     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 1)
nonsite.org     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 7)
Nordisk poesi     Open Access  
Passwords     Open Access  
Plath Profiles : An Interdisciplinary Journal for Sylvia Plath Studies     Open Access  
Poem International English Language Quarterly     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 1)
Postcolonial Text     Open Access   (Followers: 10)
Prosemas : Revista de Estudios Poéticos     Open Access  
Pushkin Review     Full-text available via subscription  
Revista de Poética Medieval     Open Access  
Style     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 3)
The Vernal Pool     Open Access  
Wallace Stevens Journal     Full-text available via subscription  
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nonsite.org
Number of Followers: 7  
 
  Full-text available via subscription Subscription journal
ISSN (Online) 2164-1668
Published by Emory College of Arts and Sciences Homepage  [1 journal]
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      Authors: Fritz Novotny
      Abstract: Cézanne eradicates any attribute that could facilitate an intellectual or emotional grasp of the objects represented in his pictorial world. Atmospheric content is systematically eliminated; life as if beheld by an “extrahuman” gaze grows cold; the illusion of three-dimensional space is laid bare; and line, a necessary evil, is deprived of even the slightest measure of expressive value, which until then it had still inescapably and as a matter of course assumed. Rather than cultivating a world of thought and feeling beneath appearances, Cézanne’s artistic ideology denies this possibility.
      PubDate: Tue, 28 May 2024 13:51:45 +000
       
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      Authors: Laura Anne Kalba
      Abstract: For Rossetti, gold’s economic and monetary associations were something to be harnessed, wielded as a weapon, or presented as an offering. His reinterpretation of gold and gilding served, therefore, a most patently modern, even modernist, agenda: not the pursuit of novelty or Greenbergian “flatness” but the purposeful interrogation of established standards of value.
      PubDate: Fri, 24 May 2024 19:03:06 +000
       
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      Authors: Stephanie O'Rourke
      Abstract: Although he may have held little in common with Marxist ideology, Martin appears to have been more alert than most to the negative disruption of a system of urban-rural exchange, more anxious than most about failing to harness the latent economic value of waste, and more motivated than most to see in infrastructure the potential for compensatory systems.
      PubDate: Fri, 24 May 2024 18:50:41 +000
       
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      Authors: Harmon Siegel
      Abstract: As the parable migrated from art criticism to the wider world, its purpose changed. Initially, it was used to understand artistic style, especially to shift the register of explanation from manual causes (the way a painter holds his brush, the materials he chooses, etc.) to cognitive ones (the way he sees and understands the world). With repeated retellings, however, cause and effect flipped. Instead of proving that style is subjective, the parable seemed to reveal that subjectivity is stylistic.
      PubDate: Fri, 24 May 2024 18:49:05 +000
       
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      Authors: Claire Moran
      Abstract: What Morisot does in Young Girl in a Ball Gown, as she does in so many of her female portraits, is to confuse interior and exterior. Again, the sofa has been pulled up against a window or balcony, and all blinds and shutters are thrown open, while real and fabricated foliage on fabrics mix in the viewer’s eye. The overall effect is a type of aesthetic confusion.
      PubDate: Fri, 24 May 2024 18:47:49 +000
       
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      Authors: Michael Fried
      Abstract: Now I want to go a step further and propose that the portraits of monomanes represent not only a climactic stage in Géricault’s development but also a decisive episode in the antitheatrical dialectic generally—as if they mark the limit case of absorption, beyond which for the moment, but perhaps not only for the moment, it was impossible for painting to go.
      PubDate: Fri, 24 May 2024 18:37:26 +000
       
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      Authors: Samuel Wheeler III
      Abstract: Speech and writing actions differ from their products. We can call the actions utterings and inscribings. An uttering’s product is an utterance. An inscribing’s product is an inscription. An uttering or inscribing is “abandoned” because features of the uttering or inscribing are not linguistically available to the audience in the utterance or inscription. Iterations of what is linguistically available, whether by the speaker or others, differ in truth-conditions from the original simply because the present and past tenses are indexicals. The force of an original is not linguistically available, so every utterance or inscription is “abandoned.” Repetitions of utterances with indexicals generate expressions with different truth-conditions but may be copies, and so iterations.
      PubDate: Wed, 14 Feb 2024 19:59:21 +000
       
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      Authors: Walter Benn Michaels
      Abstract: Another way to get at this is just to say that the identification of what the text means with what the author intends is already in place without our having any recourse to a theory of intention or to a positive account of intention as a mental state. While the work that it does in place—determining the act—makes clear the mistake in imagining that the text we write could be either controlled by or liberated from what we meant.
      PubDate: Wed, 14 Feb 2024 19:58:57 +000
       
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      Authors: Henry Staten
      Abstract: The reason Derrida does not think intentions are governing is because he thinks the condition of having a (linguistic or semiotic) one entails a form of repeatability that the intention cannot fully master. Yet there also cannot be any text-y things, written or spoken or semiotic, without intention playing some role. Moreover, as an interpreter, Derrida wants both: he wants to interpret faithfully the intention, as Henry pointed out, and read what is not available as an intention but inscribed in a text (which reading also produces). Not one or the other, but both.
      PubDate: Wed, 14 Feb 2024 19:58:18 +000
       
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      Authors: Walter Benn Michaels
      Abstract: The problem, as we’ve already begun to see, is that once you’re committed to the idea that meaning is something you try to control and/or that it’s something you impose, you’re committed also to an account of the text in which the intention must be (what Derrida rightly denies it can be) outside of it. Indeed, this is exactly what the reduction of the text to the mark requires since the act of writing is here conceived as the writer’s effort to impose a meaning on the mark she has made and since the act of reading involves the impositions of other meanings, which need not be the same as the writer’s. The reason the mark is abandoned is because that imposition necessarily fails, leaving a remainder that remains necessarily “open.”
      PubDate: Wed, 14 Feb 2024 19:57:41 +000
       
 
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  Subjects -> LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE (Total: 2147 journals)
    - LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE (954 journals)
    - LANGUAGES (276 journals)
    - LITERARY AND POLITICAL REVIEWS (201 journals)
    - LITERATURE (GENERAL) (180 journals)
    - NOVELS (13 journals)
    - PHILOLOGY AND LINGUISTICS (500 journals)
    - POETRY (23 journals)

POETRY (23 journals)

Showing 1 - 16 of 16 Journals sorted alphabetically
Brill Research Perspectives in Classical Poetry     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 2)
Calíope : Journal of the Society for Renaissance and Baroque Hispanic Poetry     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 1)
Dictynna     Open Access   (Followers: 2)
Mawlana Rumi Review     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 1)
nonsite.org     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 7)
Nordisk poesi     Open Access  
Passwords     Open Access  
Plath Profiles : An Interdisciplinary Journal for Sylvia Plath Studies     Open Access  
Poem International English Language Quarterly     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 1)
Postcolonial Text     Open Access   (Followers: 10)
Prosemas : Revista de Estudios Poéticos     Open Access  
Pushkin Review     Full-text available via subscription  
Revista de Poética Medieval     Open Access  
Style     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 3)
The Vernal Pool     Open Access  
Wallace Stevens Journal     Full-text available via subscription  
Similar Journals
Similar Journals
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JournalTOCs
School of Mathematical and Computer Sciences
Heriot-Watt University
Edinburgh, EH14 4AS, UK
Email: journaltocs@hw.ac.uk
Tel: +00 44 (0)131 4513762
 


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