Search results for "War poetry"

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El sirventès en la poesia catalana dels segles XIV-XV : un catàleg

2018

The sirventes of the troubadour era has been broadly studied, but there are not overall explanations concerning the evolution of the sirventes genre in the Catalan-speaking lands of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. This paper propounds a catalogue of sirventesos concerning its historical development, the troubadour models, rhetorical and grammatical treatises, and genre assignment in rubrics. Our catalogue contains thirty-one Catalan sirventesos , including twenty-eight extant items and three items lost. In some cases the literary motifs of the sirventes cross boundaries in a process of poetic hybridization with other moral genres which borrow out themes, images and rhetorical strate…

LiteratureHistoryUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRASHistoryFifteenthLiterature and Literary TheoryPoetrybusiness.industrylanguage.human_languageExtant taxonMedieval Catalan poetry; sirventes; war poetry; moral poetry; maldit; troubadour poetry; rhetorical and grammatical treatises; literary genres; catalogue:CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRAS [UNESCO]languageRhetorical questionCatalanbusinessOrder (virtue)
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« 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…

LiteratureLiterature and Literary TheoryAdmirationPoetry[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Literaturebusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectOdeJohn Keats Wilfred Owen odes romantisme poésie de guerreArtRomance[SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteraturePoliticsSpanish Civil WarJohn Keats Wilfred Owen odes Romanticism War PoetryHumanitySubversionbusinessmedia_common
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"Over the last hill": Wilfred Owen's "Spring Offensive"

2021

Being the poet’s last completed piece, “Spring Offensive” makes France Wilfred Owen’s last poetic landscape. The article explores the ways in which “Spring Offensive” continuously crosses and blurs the borders between the French landscape and the poet’s English heritage; it also emphasizes the sensuousness of the landscape and of the war experience, so that the bodies of the soldiers and nature fuse and interact. “Spring Offensive” thus comes to reflect Owen’s search for balance, a search of which the French landscape becomes the natural yet symbolic representation.

[SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureWar poetryWilfred Owen[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureSensationFranceComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
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