Academic literature on the topic 'Poet laureates'

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Journal articles on the topic "Poet laureates"

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Ahmad, Joyce. "Poet Laureates in the Spanish Classroom." Hispania 68, no. 2 (1985): 421. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/342222.

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Phalafala. "Of Worlds Black and Red: South Africa's Poet Laureates and Their World-Making Networks." Research in African Literatures 50, no. 3 (2019): 116. http://dx.doi.org/10.2979/reseafrilite.50.3.09.

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Korzeniowska, Aniela. ""Scotland Small? Our Multiform, Our Infinite Scotland Small?" Scotland's Literary Contribution to the Modern World." Colloquia Humanistica, no. 2 (June 13, 2015): 33–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.11649/ch.2013.003.

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"Scotland Small? Our Multiform, Our Infinite Scotland Small?" Scotland's Literary Contribution to the Modern WorldHugh MacDiarmid’s poem "Scotland Small?" (1943) questions the widespread opinion at the time that Scotland was only a small country geographically with "nothing but heather!", showing how "marvellously descriptive" this may be, but also totally "incomplete". The issue addressed in this article is how Scottish letters, starting with the outstanding and multiform writings of the same Hugh MacDiarmid (Christopher Murray Grieve [1892-1978]) and ending with observations of the international significance of such contemporary Scottish poets as Carol Ann Duffy (b. 1955), the first female to become British Poet Laureate, have contributed to the development and diversity of literature far beyond the borders of Scotland. It is also in looking at the achievements of such diverse writers as Muriel Spark, James Kelman and Ian Rankin as well as poets Ian Hamilton Finlay, Edwin Morgan, Jackie Kay, or the present Scottish Poet Laureate Liz Lochhead, among others, that we can see how significant their literary oeuvre is for a better understanding of the modern world. Emphasis is also placed on the fact that although Scotland is undoubtedly a small country geographically, we can never – in reference to the title of this volume – say it is minor.„Szkocja mała? Nasza wielopostaciowa, bezmierna Szkocja mała?” Literacki wkład Szkocji do współczesnego świataWiersz Hugh MacDiarmid’a Szkocja mała? (1943) kwestionuje ogólnopanującą opinię w pierwszej połowie XX wieku, że Szkocja to tylko mały kraj, gdzie „nie ma nic innego poza wrzosem”, pokazując jednocześnie, że „opis może i jest wspaniały”, ale także wielce „niekompletny”. Temat niniejszego artykułu opisuje, jak literatura szkocka, poczynając właśnie od wybitnej i wielorakiej twórczości MacDiarmid’a (Christopher Murray Grieve [1892- 1978]), a kończąc na międzynarodowym znaczeniu takich współczesnych poetów, jak Carol Ann Duffy (ur. 1955), pierwsza kobieta piastująca funkcję nadwornego poety brytyjskiego monarchy, przyczyniła się do rozwoju i różnorodności literatury daleko poza granicami Szkocji. Uwypuklając osiągnięcia tak różnych powieściopisarzy, jak Muriel Spark, James Kelman i Ian Rankin, czy takich poetów, jak Ian Hamilton Finlay, Edwin Morgan, Jackie Kay czy Liz Lochhead (aktualnie nosząca tytuł Narodowego Poety Szkocji), widzimy jak ważna jest ich twórczość dla lepszego zrozumienia współczesnego świata. Ich wkład do literatury światowej pokazuje, iż powierzchnia Szkocji może jest rzeczywiście mała, ale to, co pochodzi z tego małego kraju, na pewno nie jest bez znaczenia.
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Gioia, Dana. "A Boom Interview with California’s Poet Laureate." Boom 6, no. 4 (2016): 70–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/boom.2016.6.4.70.

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Dana Gioia provides his accounting of his work as California’s tenth Poet Laureate. Originally delivered to the California Senate Rules Committee, this interview accounts for Gioia’s understanding of how poetry and the arts can connect with ordinary Californians in collaborative ways. Additionally, Gioia’s poem, “A California Requiem,” accompanies the interview.
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Mazurkiewicz, Michał. "Motywy sportowe w polskiej sztuce międzywojennej — rekonesans." Literatura i Kultura Popularna 22 (September 6, 2017): 75–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.19195/0867-7441.22.5.

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Sports Motifs in Interwar Polish Art — a ReconnaissanceSport is an important cultural phenomenon permeating many spheres of human activity. It has a great strength of influence and is constantly present in art and literature, also in Poland. Artists, especially the ones being lovers of sport, have always been fascinated with the potential existing in different kinds of games. After regaining independence in 1918, physical activity enjoyed great popularity in the awaken­ing Polish state. Sport was seen as achance of broadly understood renaissance of the nation; in addi­tion, its role in preparing the army to fight in the times of still real threats was appreciated. A positive influence of sport on youth was also seen. It also entered the world of art. The aim of this paper is to present Polish artists inspired by sport, also including laureates of the Art Competitions at the Summer Olympics, like for example poet Kazimierz Wierzyński, painter Władysław Skoczylas or sculptor Józef Klukowski. The author analyses both their motivations and the artistic output. The examination is preceded by an introduction showing the beginnings of Polish art inspired by sport and entertainment, whose elements one will find for example in the case of Leon Wyczółkowski or Wojciech Kossak, as well as the beginnings of sports literature. The history of the presence of sport in Polish art and literature is quite rich. The research enquired exploration of the history of Polish antebellum sport, looking over the works of artists interested in sport, as well as familiarising oneself with numerous publications devoted to this phenomenon.
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Vermeulen, Karolien. "Home in Biblical and Antwerp City Poems – A Journey." arcadia 52, no. 1 (2017): 161–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/arcadia-2017-0009.

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AbstractSince 2003, the city of Antwerp has a poet laureate. Following the classical and Renaissance models, the Antwerp poet laureate writes, performs, and materializes poems for the city. Also in the Hebrew Bible, texts occur that qualify as city poems avant-la-lettre, even though the writers remain anonymous and the texts are part of a larger corpus with a different purpose. This article reads three Antwerp city poems alongside with biblical Psalm 137, in search for the poems’ constructions of cities as homes. The selected texts each introduce the city (i. e., Antwerp for the Antwerp city poems; Jerusalem and Babylon for the psalm) and its possible identification with a home place in ways that are conceptually and stylistically similar. The poems only differ in their final portrayals of the home, themselves connected to the different context of each poem. Throughout the texts the poets explore and question the spatial categories of ‘city’ and ‘home.’ The analysis reveals that being at home both in biblical and Antwerp city poems is connected to childhood, which allows redefining the urban space. The poems conceive cities as a mobile category that is internalized if being defined as home space. Stylistic interventions, in particular the use of inclusios and contrast, help creating and establishing the city-as-home-space in the selected city poems. The juxtaposition of old and new city poems sharing the same topic offers new insights into the textual construal of cities as homes, a process that proves to be similar for the three Antwerp city poems and the biblical psalm.
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Anderson, R. A. B. "Poet Laureate of Peebles." Gut 55, no. 4 (2006): 553. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/gut.2005.086009.

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Johnson, Rob. "Poet Laureate: San Francisco." American Book Review 30, no. 2 (2009): 16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/abr.2009.0022.

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Dalrymple, T. "The forgotten poet laureate." BMJ 339, dec02 4 (2009): b5182. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.b5182.

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Manor, Gal. "Victorian Mages: Robert Browning’s “Pietro of Abano” as a Critical Corollary to Alfred Tennyson’s Merlin." Anglia 137, no. 3 (2019): 395–410. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ang-2019-0036.

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Abstract Against the backdrop of Victorian celebrity culture, Robert Browning and Alfred Tennyson conjure the literary trope of the magician in order to convey their poetic choices and to examine the relationship between the poet and his audience. Whereas Browning’s magician, “Pietro of Abano” of Dramatic Idyls (1880), is subversive, odd and persecuted, the Poet Laureate’s Merlin of the Idylls of the King (1859–1875) is acknowledged and well admired. This essay will explore Browning’s Pietro as a critical response to Tennyson’s Merlin, reflecting the complex personal relationship between the two poets, their stylistic differences and their dissimilar reception by their contemporaries.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Poet laureates"

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Gwynne, Paul Gareth. "The life and works of Johannes Michael Nagonius, poeta laureatus c. 1450 - c. 1510." Thesis, University of London, 1990. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.366500.

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Moore, Lindsay Emory. "The Laureates’ Lens: Exposing the Development of Literary History and Literary Criticism From Beneath the Dunce Cap." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2015. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc822784/.

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In this project, I examine the impact of early literary criticism, early literary history, and the history of knowledge on the perception of the laureateship as it was formulated at specific moments in the eighteenth century. Instead of accepting the assessments of Pope and Johnson, I reconstruct the contemporary impact of laureate writings and the writing that fashioned the view of the laureates we have inherited. I use an array of primary documents (from letters and journal entries to poems and non-fiction prose) to analyze the way the laureateship as a literary identity was constructed in several key moments: the debate over hack literature in the pamphlet wars surrounding Elkanah Settle’s The Empress of Morocco (1673), the defense of Colley Cibber and his subsequent attempt to use his expertise of theater in An Apology for the Life of Colley Cibber (1740), the consolidation of hack literature and state-sponsored poetry with the crowning of Colley Cibber as the King of the Dunces in Pope’s The Dunciad in Four Books (1742), the fashioning of Thomas Gray and William Mason as laureate rejecters in Mason’s Memoirs of the Life and Writings of William Whitehead (1788), Southey’s progressive work to abolish laureate task writing in his laureate odes 1813-1821, and, finally, in Wordsworth’s refusal to produce any laureate task writing during his tenure, 1843-1850. In each case, I explain how the construction of this office was central to the consolidation of literary history and to forging authorial identity in the same period. This differs from the conventional treatment of the laureates because I expose the history of the versions of literary history that have to date structured how scholars understand the laureate, and by doing so, reveal how the laureateship was used to create, legitimate and disseminate the model of literary history we still use today.
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Rothfuss, David Alexander. "Fireworks and Sex! A field study guide to America's shiniest religion." Miami University / OhioLINK, 2011. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=miami1304805353.

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Wei-YingLin and 林蔚頴. "A Study on the Poet Laureate of Lan-Yung, Wan-Yang Lee and his "Westward Poem Volumes"." Thesis, 2010. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/42922683053474178106.

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碩士<br>國立成功大學<br>台灣文學系碩博士班<br>98<br>Wan-Yang Lee, a man of strict morality, was born and grew up in Yi-lan. Of all his life, he experienced across four emperors’ ages of the Ching . He was born at the time when Japanese ruled the island. He studied very hard and got the permission to be the candidate when he was young. Then he practiced his ideal becoming a professional scholar by following Confucius’ rules and principles. He revitalized the culture and education system and stood as a role of advocacy even before he became an official in the government. Moreover, he visited Gansu, a province of China, for thirteen years. He made great achievement in Gansu, so he was highly praised by the people. After he returned from Gansu, he continued to honor and gave compliments to Confucianism of all his life. His demeanor could be summarized into a few words, the holy person who lets. My thesis aims at analyzing Lee’s life and his collection of poems “Westward Poem Volumes”. Also, I would make some comments and discussion about its style, and the issue which was provoked by the poems. Besides making a careful description of his works, I would like to make a just, exact appreciation of Lee’s life and show his attitudes confronting with Japanese’s governance.
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"The Orphic laureate: Jonson, Milton, and Dryden as national poets." Tulane University, 1997.

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The increasing cultural authority of writers in the seventeenth century fosters the growth of many modern notions of authorship. I argue that the myth of the poet/musician Orpheus, whose skillful words civilized 'savage' early humans, provides the model for this more powerful role. The Orpheus myth intersects with key emerging discourses: the dynastic state and the nation-state, patronage and print, and gender and sexuality. Pursuit of Orphic laureateship emerges as a common thread in the careers of three very different poets, the professional and patronage writers John Dryden and Ben Jonson, and the anti-monarchist and scholar John Milton. In arguing for an Orphic laureate, I use evidence from Jonson's, Milton's, and Dryden's texts to establish the existence of a larger cultural pattern in the early modern period. I consider the Protestant embrace of text over ritual and the advent of print culture in conjunction with the application of musical theory in contemporary scientific discourses of medicine, political science, and rhetoric to establish the theoretical foundation for how Orphic magic influences human actions through music and texts. The ambiguities of the shift from patronage to print allow the Orphic laureates to magnify the threat of political censorship while using the new authority of critical expertise to reallocate this power to the academy. At the center of this effort are the formalization of the office of poet laureate and proposals to centralize cultural authority in a British Academy presided over by the chief critic, the laureate. The concept of the Orphic laureate also connects with Orpheus's reputation after his wife's death as a hater of women and the originator of male homosexuality. Laureates begin the later move toward biologically-based gender difference by reworking the traditional associations of women with the magic of creation and offering Orphic magic as the masculine, civilizing force that contains and shapes feminine Nature. One important result of these efforts is the trend among male writers to create all-male professional genealogies for themselves, lists that have formed many of our notions about canonicity and literary standards<br>acase@tulane.edu
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Books on the topic "Poet laureates"

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Zetlin, Liz. Addictions of a poet laureate. Always Press, 2008.

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Addictions of a Poet Laureate. Always Press, 2007.

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Grindrod, Cathy. Laureate lines: Poems from the first Derbyshire poet Laureate. Derbyshire County Cultural & Community Services Dept., 2007.

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Vaṅʻʺ, Khyacʻ Caṃ. Mekong poet: Portrait of great poet laureate Htilar Sitthu. Lat Moe Swe Pub. House, 2005.

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Schmidt, Elizabeth. The poets laureate anthology. W.W. Norton & Co., 2010.

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Poets laureate of Kentucky. Wind Publications, 2004.

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Hill, Norah. Like: the Middlesbrough poet laureate poems 2002-2003. Mudfog, 2002.

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Tennyson, Tennyson Alfred. The poetical works of Alfred Tennyson, poet laureate. J.R. Osgood, 1993.

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Tennyson, Tennyson Alfred. The poetical works of Alfred Tennyson, poet laureate. J.R. Osgood, 1993.

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Wilbur, Richard. A wood. Coffee House Press at Minnesota Center for Book Arts, 1988.

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Book chapters on the topic "Poet laureates"

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Gill, Jo. "The “Poet Laureate” of Suburbia." In The Poetics of the American Suburbs. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137340238_4.

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Robinson, Daniel. "Stuart’s Laureates I: Poets and Politics Perplext." In The Poetry of Mary Robinson. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230118034_5.

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"3. The Oral Poet Laureate." In Song and Silence. Columbia University Press, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.7312/davi13526-005.

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Kucich, Greg, and Jeffrey N. Cox. "Office of Poet-Laureat." In The Selected Writings of Leigh Hunt. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429348549-66.

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Kucich, Greg, and Jeffrey N. Cox. "The New Poet-Laureat." In The Selected Writings of Leigh Hunt. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429348549-67.

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"APPENDIX A: PAPAL POETS LAUREATE." In Poets Laureate in the Holy Roman Empire. De Gruyter, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110640861-027.

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"APPENDIX B: SPURIOUS POETS LAUREATE." In Poets Laureate in the Holy Roman Empire. De Gruyter, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110640861-028.

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"Appendix A: Papal Poets Laureate." In Poets Laureate in the Holy Roman Empire. De Gruyter, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110912746.2330.

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"Appendix Β: Spurious Poets Laureate." In Poets Laureate in the Holy Roman Empire. De Gruyter, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110912746.2346.

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"A Woman Poet Laureate – E.V. Lucas 190." In Thomas Hardy Remembered. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315236193-104.

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Conference papers on the topic "Poet laureates"

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Kolesnikov, Andrei Vitaljevich, Georgii Gennadyevich Malinetskii, and Svetlana Nikolaevna Sirenko. "Digital reality: Choosing the future." In 4th International Conference “Futurity designing. Digital reality problems”. Keldysh Institute of Applied Mathematics, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.20948/future-2021-1.

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We present an analysis of reports, round table discussions, approaches presented at the IV International Conference “Designing the Future and Horizons of Digital Reality”. The focus of the conference participants was the analysis of the results, risks and prospects for the development of the computer reality of the world and the Belarus-Russia Union State from the position of an interdisciplinary synthesis of knowledge at the intersection of philosophy, mathematics, computer science, sociology and a number of other disciplines. At one time, the Nobel Prize laureate academician Zh.I. Alferov said that it is in Russia and Belarus that the potential in the field of information and telecommunication (IT) technologies is greatest among the post-Soviet countries. And it is these technologies that should become the basis of our scientific and technical breakthrough. This foresight is the leitmotif of this conference. Many innovations in our countries are perceived with the imperative: “New is good”. But it’s not always the case. Our world is not linear. It is characterized by bifurcation points, in one of which it is now. Discoveries, technologies, inventions at this point can determine which branch of further development will be chosen. Therefore, a broad interdisciplinary analysis of the strategic risks of the development of computer reality is required. The choice that is now being made must be conscious and responsible. This circle of problems is also in the center of attention of the conference participants.
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