Search results for "Keats"
showing 10 items of 12 documents
Tressage de sensation et hypersensibilité dans la poésie keatsienne
2020
La synesthesie, phenomene neurologique aujourd’hui reconnu, suscite depuis plusieurs annees un regain d’interet dans le monde scientifique comme le confirme la parution, en 2011, de l’article d’Herve-Pierre Lambert « La synesthesie. Vues de l’interieur », dans lequel l’auteur repertorie les evolutions historiques de l’etude du concept. En neuropsychologie, la synesthesie est un trouble de la perception sensorielle qui produit des associations previsibles, mais involontaires, entre differents ...
John Keats kaukosiirtäjässä : paradigman murtumisen kuvaus Dan Simmonsin Hyperionissa
2005
« Making Sense of Wilfred Owen’s Keatsian Heritage: “Exposure” and “Ode to a Nightingale” »
2020
Readers of Wilfred Owen usually agree that the war poet’s early admiration for John Keats faded after he enlisted in the army; his poetry then turned against Keats’s. The opening paraphrase of Owen’s poem “Exposure” is thus often read as a rejection and a subversion of the Romantic poet’s “Ode to a Nightingale.” This essay will argue that Owen’s poem can be seen as a radical reversal of Keats’s ode. While “Exposure” is indeed more violent and political than “Ode to a Nightingale,” it does not depart from Keats’s conception of human suffering and of nature. Instead, the war poem builds on Keats’s fleeting description of suffering humanity in “Ode to a Nightingale” and extends it. It also ech…
La sensation dans l'oeuvre de John Keats
2021
« Une poétique du tissage : La Chute d’Hypérion, de John Keats (1821) »
2013
International audience
"If Mine Had Been The Painter's Hand": When Wordsworth And Keats Re/Un-Write Paintings
2010
International audience
« Retour vers l’humain : présences de John Keats dans Hypérion et La Chute dʼHypérion, de Dan Simmons »
2014
International audience
Lettres et poèmes de John Keats: portrait de l'artiste
2000
International audience
An English Poet in Scotland: John Keats's Letters To His Brother Tom
2005
This paper studies the letters John Keats sent to his brother during his walking tour of Scotland. This means of expression provided the young poet with a medium in which to share his doubts and shocks when confronted with what was still a very foreign country for an Englishman at the time. The article first shows how letter-writing plays a part in creating distance from unpleasant experiences, mostly thanks to humour. It then moves on to a study of Keats's reactions in front of the Scottish landscape and Burns's cottage and tombstone, two aspects of Scotland he had been eager to discover. The language in the letters thus gradually becomes more literary, and the last part of the article foc…
« Entre transparence et opacité : quelques textes autour de la vie du poète caméléon »
2014
International audience