Academic literature on the topic 'Poet mentions'

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Journal articles on the topic "Poet mentions"

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Rodríguez-Noriega Guillén, Lucía, and Javier Uría. "Ibycus and Diomedes." Mnemosyne 70, no. 3 (2017): 450–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1568525x-12342113.

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The fourth-century Latin grammarian Diomedes reports the otherwise unparalleled doctrine that the Latin onomastic system is derived from that of the Greeks. To sustain this view, he mentions the various names of some Greek heroes, some of which seem to be drawn from the lyric poet Ibycus of Rhegium. This poet is also mentioned when the grammarian needs to provide examples of some rare patronymics. These two references to Ibycus in Diomedes are extensively dealt with in this paper, in which we try to disentangle the arguments and intentions behind this strange doctrine, as well as the role Ibycus plays in it. The alleged possibility that Ibycus is not the archaic poet, but rather a later grammarian, is discussed and rejected. Possible sources for the doctrine are proposed.
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Mills, Kevin. "“THE TRUTH OF MIDNIGHT”: APOCALYPTIC INSOMNIA IN JAMES THOMSON'S THE CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT." Victorian Literature and Culture 35, no. 1 (2007): 121–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1060150307051443.

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“… of Night, but not of Sleep” James Thomson, The City of Dreadful NightJAMES (BV) THOMSON'S insomnia is well documented. Bertram Dobell's memoir of the poet makes several mentions of it, as do critics of his work such as Robert Crawford, Edwin Morgan, and William Sharpe. Although widely acknowledged and noted as a significant biographical detail by critics, Thomson's insomnia has not been examined in terms of its relation to the specifically apocalyptic tone in some of his work. It is this curious relationship and its implications for the reading of his long poem The City of Dreadful Night which form the focus of this paper.
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Mermin, Dorothy. "Barrett Browning's Stories." Browning Institute Studies 13 (1985): 99–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0092472500005381.

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Reviewing her career as a professional poet, Aurora Leigh describes her dubiously successful beginnings:My ballads prospered; but the ballad's raceIs rapid for a poet who bears weightsOf thought and golden image ….Barrett Browning's ballads had prospered too, and like Aurora she did not find their success particularly creditable, a judgment that has been emphatically shared by twentieth-century critics. But when Robert Browning told her in his first letter that he loved her poems, these were the ones he meant. The ballads are almost the only works of hers that he mentions in their correspondence, and he mentions them often. Gracious Lady Geraldine, bold and selfimmolating Duchess May, the lady disguised as a page who dies defending her husband from the Saracens - such heroines charmed a large and diverse company of Victorian admirers, including Mary Russell Mitford, Edgar Allan Poe, Harriet Martineau, Thomas Carlyle, and most of Elizabeth Barrett's friends and reviewers, in the years before her marriage when her reputation was made.
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Stouck, Mary-Ann. "Of Talking Heads and Other Marvels: Hagiography and Lay Piety in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight." Florilegium 17, no. 1 (2000): 59–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/flor.17.004.

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Among the unresolved issues in our understanding of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is the function of the hagiographical references, comprised both of saints whom the poet mentions explicitly (Julian, Peter, Giles, John the Evangelist and/or Baptist), and of those whom he seems to have in mind but does not explicitly name. Since Ronald Tamplin's 1969 essay in Speculum substantially introduced the subject, scholars have traced numerous parallels between the stories of the saints and Gawain's adventures with a view to discovering whether the analogies function positively or ironically—that is, whether Gawain is more or less saint-like in his behaviour. Briefly, then, there is broad agreement as to the special importance of saints' references in the poem, but there remains disagreement as to their significance.
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Ojcewicz, Grzegorz. "Borysa Popławskiego Uwagi o poezji: autorskie credo a wyobraźnia tłumacza." Acta Polono-Ruthenica 2, no. XXIII (2018): 97–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.31648/apr.2534.

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This article scrutinizes the structure and content of Boris Poplavsky’s Notes on Poetry. The text reveals the thoughts of this Russian poet who writes about the Russian poetic tradition (Pushkin, Blok) and mentions selected aspects of emigrant reality. B. Poplavsky stresses the importance of an innovative element in the creative process. He indicates the basic mechanisms governing the inner literary process which determine the evolution of fiction.
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Łukaszewicz, Adam. "Remarks on Ovid and the Golden Age of Augustus." Symbolae Philologorum Posnaniensium Graecae et Latinae 29, no. 2 (2019): 37–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/sppgl.2020.xxix.2.3.

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Publius Ovidius Naso was an outstanding poet of the Augustan age who after a period of successful activity was suddenly sent to exile without a formal judicial procedure. Ovid wrote frivolous poems but inserted into his works also the obligatory praises of Augustus. The standard explanation of his relegation to Tomis is the licentious content of his Ars Amatoria, which were believed to offend the moral principles of Augustus. However, the Ars had been published several years before the exile. The poet himself in his Pontic writings mentions an unspecified error and a carmen, pointing also to the Ars, without, however, a clear explanation of the reason for his fall. The writer of the present contribution assumes that the actual reason for the relegation of the poet without a trial were the verses of his Metamorphoses and especially the passage about the wicked stepmothers preparing poison. That could offend Livia who, according to gossip, used poison to get rid of unwanted family members. Ovid was exiled, but the matter was too delicate for a public justification of the banishment. When writing ex Ponto the poet could not explicitly refer to the actual cause of his exile.
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Toscano, Fabio. "The Tuscan Artist." Journal of Science Communication 03, no. 03 (2004): A02. http://dx.doi.org/10.22323/2.03030202.

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In The Areopagitica, his most important work of prose, John Milton mentions Galileo as the illustrious martyr who fought for the freedom of thought. The name of the great scientist is repeated several times in the English poet's epic masterpiece: Paradise Lost. In three different passages of the poem, Milton in fact celebrates the "Tuscan Artist" and his crucial achievements in astronomy. Nevertheless, in a subsequent passage, the poet addresses the Copernican issue without openly defending the heliocentric theory confirmed by Galileo's discoveries. In fact, he neither embraces the Copernican system nor the Ptolemaic one, but instead compares them, following a dialectic method where one cannot fail to notice an echo of Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the two Chief World Systems. Milton's literary work presents images of astronomy at that time, thus offering a valuable historical example of scientific communication through art.
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López Cruces, Juan L. "A HEAVENLY SON OF ZEUS (DIOG. LAERT. 6.76 = CERCIDAS, FR. 54 LIVREA)." Classical Quarterly 68, no. 1 (2018): 91–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009838818000046.

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In hisLives of Eminent Philosophers(6.75–6) Diogenes Laertius mentions, among the various traditions of how Diogenes the Cynic met his end, the belief that he committed suicide by retention of the breath. He cites as his authority for this the poet Cercidas of Megalopolis (c.290–post 215b.c.e.), who, between some fifty and a hundred years after the death of the Cynic, celebrated his ascent to heaven in the following verses.
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Król, Karolina, and Jerzy Kandziora. "“I think that poets and, more broadly, all artists have some certain cognitive impatience in them”." Czytanie Literatury. Łódzkie Studia Literaturoznawcze, no. 9 (December 30, 2020): 357–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/2299-7458.09.19.

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The interview covers the subject of Stanisław Barańczak and his works. Pondering on the way the poet pictures the existence of God in his poems is an important part of the text. Another crucial subject is the way Barańczak deals with his illness and portrays it in his poetic works. In the interview Jerzy Kandziora – an exquisite reasercher of the poetry written by Barańczak and Jerzy Ficowski − mentions his private relationship with both Barańczak and his wife.
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Boullata, Issa J. "Textual Intentions: A Reading Of Adonis' Poem “Unintended Workship Ritual”." International Journal of Middle East Studies 21, no. 4 (1989): 541–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020743800032918.

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In his long poem entitled “Quddās bi-lā qasd” (Unintended Worship Ritual), the well-known Syrian–Lebanese poet Adonis (Dr. 'Ali Ahmad Sa'īd) celebrates a love relationship with a young woman he came to know while he was a professor at the Syrian University in Damascus. He mentions two dates and two cities at the end of the poem, suggesting perhaps that he began writing the poem in Damascus in January of 1976 and that he finished it in Beirut in August of 1978. He had moved to Damascus from Beirut during the early years of the Lebanese Civil War and accepted a teaching position at the Syrian University, but he later returned to Beirut, where his home had been since he had left his native Syria to become a Lebanese citizen in 1956. The same young woman also inspired him to write a much shorter undated poem entitled “Awwal al-ijtiya” (The Beginning of Sweeping Annihilation) in which his passionate love is expressed in terms of a deep desire to be natural, to give vent to the powers within the self, and to remove what he considers to be the constraints of hypocritical, repressive sociocultural conventions in Arab society.
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Books on the topic "Poet mentions"

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Hawes, Timothy. Norfolk inquisitions post mortem, 1235-1432: Index of persons and places mentioned in the published calendars volumes, I-XXIII. Hawes Books, 2005.

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Joachim, Camerarius. Narratio de Helio Eobano Hesso: Comprehendens mentionem de compluribus illius aetatis doctis & eruditis viris (1553) : lateinisch und deutsch = Das Leben des Dichters Helius Eobanus Hessus : mit Erwähnung mehrerer seiner gelehrten und gebildeten Zeitgenossen. Manutius, 2003.

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Canada. Parliament. House of Commons. Bill: An act to legalize a certain agreement between the Grand Trunk Railway Company, and the town of Galt, and for other purposes therein mentioned. I.B. Taylor, 2002.

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Kirk, Robert G. W., and Michael Worboys. Medicine and Species: One Medicine, One History? Edited by Mark Jackson. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199546497.013.0031.

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This article surveys the present position of the animal within the history of human medicine, linking this to work in the history of veterinary medicine, and also speculates on the value of making ‘species’ a central and unifying theme of a new history of medicine. It mentions that re-conceiving medicine as a set of knowledge-practices grounded in interspecies interactions promises to reinvigorate the subject. It draws on a diverse theoretical literature ranging from ‘animal studies’ to ‘post-human’ literature in order to suggest how such an approach could allow us to re-imagine what medicine has been and still may be. This is a timely project as the medical and veterinary professions, after long debating the notion of ‘one medicine’ as ‘a common pool of knowledge in microbiology, immunology, physiology, pathology and epidemiology’, are now calling to develop the field.
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Vlad, Florian Andrei. Space, place, narrative in JOHN QUINN’s poetry. Editura Universitara, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5682/9786062811426.

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The genesis of these poems links them to places as diverse as Horse Lake and Zigzag Creek, Oregon, sometimes in quest for monsters such as the mythic Ogopogo in Lake Okanagan in the same part of America. Klan Country may be less unspoilt and scenic than the above-mentioned Oregonian sites, but is part of a Trans American journey, and such places as Mala Ivanča, Serbia, Ahwaz, Iran or Mt. Fujimidai, Japan, although scattered over the globe, coexist in John Quinn’s “chronotopic poetic imaginary,” as it were. The poet has shared his poems with us, but he has also challenged us to explore remote places on our own, once the reading of these poems is done. He invites us to explore the wilderness and its wildlife, in addition to his poetic vision.
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Hiltebeitel, Alf. Thinking Goddesses, Mothers, Brothers, and Snakes with Freud and Bose. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190878375.003.0008.

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This chapter further explores snake symbolism, highlighting also goddesses, Freud’s mother Amalia, and Freud’s brothers and half-brothers. The author considers the ideas of post-Freudian psychoanalytic writers who shed light on these themes, including Eric Erikson, and Freud’s “specimen dream” of “Irma’s Injection” as evoking a vagina. Here, Freud states his rule that every dream has an “unplumbable navel” beyond which the analyst cannot go. The chapter goes on to discuss ideas of Bernard This, John Abbott, and Bruno Bettelheim, with Freud’s early mention of the Loch Ness monster as a likely allusion to Athena with her snakes. Finally, the author takes up Bertram Lewin’s concept of the “dream screen,” as well as the personal universe of Romain Rolland’s oceanic feeling.
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Butt, Simon, and Tim Lindsey. The Constitution and State Institutions. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199677740.003.0001.

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This chapter provides an overview of Indonesia’s constitutional structure and the institutions that operate within it. It begins with a brief constitutional history, from Independence to the post-Soeharto period, then outlines the key provisions of the Constitution, including the institutions of state and human rights established therein. It then briefly describes these constitutional institutions, including Indonesia’s various legislatures and consultative bodies, executives, and courts. The chapter concludes with a description of state institutions that, while not mentioned in the Constitution, play important roles in state administration, law and security, human rights, finance, and the media.
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Shapiro, H. A. Hesiod and the Visual Arts. Edited by Alexander C. Loney and Stephen Scully. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190209032.013.17.

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This chapter explores the influence of Hesiod’s Theogony on Greek visual artists of the archaic period (ca. 700–480 bce). Since dozens of divinities and heroes mentioned in the poem appear in sculpture and (more often) vase painting and cannot be systematically treated, one major work with strong Hesiodic associations is examined as a test case. The Attic black-figure dinos signed by the painter Sophilos and dated ca. 580 bce includes more than thirty gods and goddesses participating in the wedding of Peleus and Thetis, future parents of Achilles. All of these can be found in the Theogony, and the poem can be a helpful guide to understanding how the individual figures are placed in the procession. The unique depiction of Okeanos on the dinos illustrates especially well the complex relationship of text and image.
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Port Hope, Lindsay and Beaverton Railway Company., ed. Memorandum relating to the bill introduced by Mr. M.C. Cameron, intituled "An Act to remove doubts as to the legality of certain instruments therein mentioned, and for other purposes". s.n., 1985.

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Rosenmeyer, Patricia A. Modern Memnon. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190626310.003.0006.

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Chapter 6 starts with the accidental silencing of the statue in the early third century CE, and jumps ahead to its rediscovery in Europe. In the mid-eighteenth century, travelers reported seeing a huge statue with poems etched on its surface. Later, Napoleon’s surveyors brought back drawings scribbled down in their free time. The nineteenth century saw a craze for all things Egyptian: Hegel mentioned the colossus; Keats and Wordsworth turned Memnon into a Romantic hero. Memnon functioned as an alter ego for the poet himself, broken in body yet still striving to sing in the harsh environment of the real world. Just as he had in the imperial period, Memnon also represented something strange and inexplicable. The striking voice of Shelley’s “Ozymandias” is also heard only in the context of fragmentation and decay. The status of these statues as fragments, as colossal wrecks, allows for the magic of the voice.
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Book chapters on the topic "Poet mentions"

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Brody, Robert. "Sa’adyah the Poet." In Sa'adyah Gaon. Liverpool University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781904113881.003.0006.

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This chapter focuses on how Sa'adyah Gaon excelled in poetry, which he worked within the most highly structured frameworks that brought great originality to his praxis. It discusses Medieval Hebrew poetry that is typically classified in contemporary research as either liturgical or secular according to its formal function. It also cites poetry that is intended for use in religious ceremonies and classified as piyut or liturgical poetry, while poetry that is not intended is classified as secular. The chapter describes the composers of piyut who were referred to as paitanim during rabbinic times and their poetry that was called hazanut or hazana in the Middle Ages. It mentions a paitan named is Yosi ben Yosi, who is generally presumed to have been active during the fifth or sixth century.
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"Who Wrote the Analects?" In Who Wrote That?, edited by Donald Ostrowski. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501749704.003.0003.

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This chapter focuses on the Analects, which is a collection of 512 passages arranged in twenty chapters that describe what Confucius said. The chapter talks about the rationalist neo-Confucian philosopher Zhu Xi who selected the Analects as one of the Four Books to read in order to understand Confucian teachings during the Song dynasty. It also mentions the Five Classics of Confucianism that were traditionally ascribed to Confucius in the sense that he wrote some and edited others. The chapter discusses Ban Gu, a Chinese politician and poet who provided the seminal narrative for how it was thought the Analects was compiled. It also pays attention to the poet and politician Liu Zongyuan, who expressed the opinion that disciples of Zengzi compiled the Analects.
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Stubbs, Tara. "Briefer Mentions and Lyrical Lexicons: Marianne Moore’s Responses to Dictionaries in The Dial and Observations." In Poetry & the Dictionary. Liverpool University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789620566.003.0009.

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1925 was an important year for the poet and editor Marianne Moore. First, she began assuming editorial responsibility for the American literary magazine The Dial, taking over from her predecessor Scofield Thayer. Second, she saw her collection Observations published, with the first edition selling out within a month. Moore’s interest in dictionaries at this time displays some intriguing overlaps between her critical and creative lives, still an underexplored area within Moore studies. Therefore, this chapter discusses Moore’s early reviews of a range of reference works, before turning its attention to Moore’s poems ‘Injudicious Gardening’ and ‘Marriage’, to demonstrate how Moore’s preoccupation with questions of definition becomes altogether more subversive, and revealing of her capricious attitude towards the notion of ‘definition’ itself.
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Molodowsky, Kadya, and Kathryn Hellerstein. "Paper Bridges: Selected Poems of Kadya Molodowsky." In Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry Volume 16. Liverpool University Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781874774730.003.0036.

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This chapter looks at Paper Bridges: Selected Poems of Kadya Molodowsky. In Paper Bridges, the poet, translator, and Yiddish scholar Kathryn Hellerstein has selected poems from the six books of Yiddish poetry which Kadya Molodowsky published between 1924 and 1974. In her introduction, Hellerstein mentions that, according to Jewish legend, when the messiah comes, the Jews will cross into paradise over a paper bridge. Molodowsky's use of this folk motif as a theme in her poetry exemplifies its double character, which embraces both social realism and messianic utopianism. The poems are presented in their original Yiddish version and in precise, often evocative, translations. Endnotes elucidate ambiguous meanings of Yiddish words. This allows the reader to partake in some of the choices Hellerstein faced as translator.
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McRae, Calista. "Terrance Hayes." In Lyric as Comedy. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501750977.003.0005.

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This chapter presents Terrance Hayes as a contemporary poet who continues to implement and push back against lyric reading as handed down and evolving from the New Critics. It recounts the experiments of Hayes's first book that began with a simple desire to challenge, impress, and piss off the people. It mentions how Hayes's work continues to have the ambivalent self-consciousness that shapes how one writes about one's self. The chapter talks about Hayes's main comic iridescence between expression and something beyond expression. It looks at centrifugal effects of Haye's poetry that seem in excess of a poem's meaning as it affirms a view of both a mind and a lyric as taking in more than their most visible apparent subjects.
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Klinger, William, and Denis Kuljiš. "Marshal." In Tito's Secret Empire. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197572429.003.0022.

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This chapter recounts how the Comintern had been pushed into the background after moving first to Kuybyshev and then to Ufa, and finally away from the Moscow vortex. It tells of the eventual expiration of the Comintern in the summer of 1943, during which Fascist Italy also collapsed between July and September. It also refers to Vladimir Nazor, a well-known poet who joined the Partisans despite his advanced age, who wrote a few poems that were set to music by composer Oskar Danon in the glory of the newly minted Marshal Tito. The chapter discusses the arrival of the US delegation in Tehran for the Allied conference codenamed “Eureka” in November 1943 with a bundle of raw estimates and worst-case scenarios. It mentions Harry Hopkins, Roosevelt's special advisor, who anticipated Soviet domination in postwar Europe.
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Walshe, Eibhear. "Wilde, Classicism, and Homosexuality in Modern Ireland." In Classics and Irish Politics, 1916-2016. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198864486.003.0012.

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This chapter explores how Irish writers since Oscar Wilde have invoked Hellenism when faced with public exposure of their homosexuality. Wilde is seen both as a dissident against England and, for gay writers, a champion and liberator. For James Joyce, Wilde was a figure of defiance and a fellow exile. Patrick Pearse never mentions Wilde, but seems to have been drawn to his sensibility in the parallels he suggests between ancient Greek and Irish masculinity. The writings of Brendan Behan are no less permeated by Wilde’s Hellenism. Following the decriminalization of homosexuality in Ireland, affiliation with Wilde could be openly acknowledged, as in Jamie O’Neill’s At Swim, Two Boys (2001), where Wilde is an iconic symbol of both homosexuality and patriotic rebellion. Controversy has been reframed, however, through media associations of Hellenism with paedophilia, and has embroiled politician David Norris and Irish-language poet Cathal Ó Searcaigh.
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Miller, Julie. "The Law of Seduction." In Cry of Murder on Broadway. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501751486.003.0009.

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This chapter recounts how Lydia Maria Child had taken Amelia Norman to her home to live with her as an intimate of her family after she won the trial. It notes how Lydia kept track of Amelia during the months that she lived with her in the spring of 1844, getting to know her better than she had been able to when Amelia was a prisoner at the Tombs. It also mentions Lydia's belief that Amelia's strong deep feelings were what drove her to the verge of madness. The chapter refers to Maria Lowell, wife of poet and diplomat James Russell Lowell, to whom Lydia recommended Norman for a job as a personal maid. It highlights Lydia's publication of “Letter from New York No. V” while Amelia was living with her, which was a jeremiad against the failure of the law to protect women and the men who made the law.
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Struk, Janina. "Constructing the Post-war Memory: ‘Don’t Mention the Jews’." In Photographing the Holocaust. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003135661-8.

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Bobker, Danielle. "Lady Acheson’s Privy for Two." In The Closet. Princeton University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691198231.003.0003.

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This chapter offers a new view of Jonathan Swift's “excremental vision” by approaching it not as a personal quirk or neurotic symptom but as a perceptive critique of the excretory autonomy that flushable water closets would soon come to embody. It talks about the country-house poets that had traditionally celebrated abundant fields and communal feasts in the great hall as signs of Swift's generosity. It confirms that in Swift's mock country-house poem “Panegyric on the Dean,” he imagined the pair of his-and-hers privies built on Lord and Lady Acheson's country estate. The chapter also analyzes why the poem is at odds with the natural cycles of regeneration and feudal hospitality that it sent the mind away from the earth, the cosmos, and other people in a burlesque of closet prayer. It mentions that Swift tried to preempt Lady Acheson's desire to circulate the poem by casting her as the speaker in his first scatological poem.
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Conference papers on the topic "Poet mentions"

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Katre, Poonman. "Lessons from adaptaation of local knowledge an traditional practices for urban public spaces as an effective tool for urban devleopment in hot cities." In Post-Oil City Planning for Urban Green Deals Virtual Congress. ISOCARP, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/izoo6469.

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Historically, Hot cities around India have always relied on urban public spaces for its sociocultural as well as economic activities. They showed a greater capacity to adopt and sustain over time. The reason seems to be lying under its tendency to evolve and accommodate temporality and sustain with its constancy. These urban public spaces were strongly bonded with religions and customs rooted in nature and inbuilt into societal norms, there by emphasizing greater ecological consciousness and protection. But in the last century, globalization brought aesthetic & grand spectacle as deciding criteria for planning and designing of the urban public spaces. The result is, energy consuming, deserted, inaccessible and underutilized public spaces over a longer period as opposed to its short-lived fame. Urbanization has given rise to the new narrative for these urban public spaces which evolved in to hybrid versions conceptualized from global practices. This pose a threat in terms of loss of civic life and decreasing social cultural flows in the city. Cities with the highest temperature seems to be getting the worst of it, essentially due to two main reasons. First are the adopted global models being not responsive to the local context, failing to stay active over longer periods of time and second due to failure to reconceptualize our traditional practices and local knowledge associated with development of cities in to ongoing practices. Previous study of historic Indian public spaces in hot cities, highlights their nature as being symbolic, functionalist, political, performative, and cultural and hence proving to be contextually sensitive. These urban public spaces were designed to be a platform extension of their everyday outdoor life. This everyday outdoor life in hot cities have taken a shape in to various manifestation of forms. And emphasized more on organic development of public spaces. Now, the current system in India that is responsible for generating our urban public spaces are regulated and mandated by state and local guidelines such as, URDPFI guidelines etc. which only mentions about open spaces to be left per area per person or in terms of percentage or buildable area. Little to no consideration has been given to how that open space should be treated. The solution can be found in adaptation and reconceptualizing of these local knowledge and traditional practices suitable to today's spatial context. But a greater consideration needs to be given to the modern-day applicability and checking its suitability. With that consideration, the paper will try to analysis selective samples of urban public spaces before the industrialization in the hot cities depending upon the generic public places i.e., Access and linkage, Purpose and activities, comfort and image, sociability, (Project for public spaces), adaptability, Thermal comfort, User responsiveness. The results then will be tested to check its adaptability in present day context with the help of case study.
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Erdem, Ekrem, and Halit Mammadov. "Regionalism Tendency in Post – Soviet Countries." In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c04.00698.

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We drew attention in our study to two directions of the growing regionalism in the Post – Soviet countries. The regionalism in the Post – Soviet Space has an indecisive character. A group of the country (Ukraine, Moldova, South Caucasus countries) is evaluating the regionalism as a medium of the integration with global markets and liberal world, but the other group (leading through Russia, Belarus and countries of Central Asia) see the regionalism as a factor, which is against the globalism. We made a conceptional analyze in the first part of our study. The second part of our study contents the implementation. The main these of our study “Regionalism processes in the Post – Soviet space” have been researched and analyzed under the title of Commonwealth of Independent States and Eurasian Economic Union. The foundation of the Eurasia Economic Union with the aim of more supporting of the economically integration in the Post – Soviet countries is a very important example of the new regionalism tendencies. There will be analyzed in our studies the phases of the Eurasian Economic Union – Eurasian Economic Community, Custom Union and Common Economic Space in scope of regionalism concept. It will be also explained the strategically aims of the mentioned regional structure.
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3

Benshak, Alice Bernard. "An Assessment of the Approaches of Construction and Demolition Waste in Jos, Plateau State of Nigeria." In Post-Oil City Planning for Urban Green Deals Virtual Congress. ISOCARP, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/sebh6010.

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The continuous rise in population, urbanization and expansion of cities has triggered a corresponding increase in construction and demolition activity. The frequent collapse of buildings attributed to poor structural design, building decay, and/or use of substandard materials has generated a substantial increase in construction refuse, also referred to as Construction and Demolition (C&D) Waste. This waste stream originates from residential, commercial, agricultural, institutional and industrial building projects for new builds, reconstruction, expansion, and refurbishments/rehabilitation. Most studies in Nigeria have generally focused on solid waste management without considering the uniqueness of C&D and giving it the attention needed, in order to achieve sustainable urban spaces that are highly functional, safe, convenient, and livable. This study seeks to investigate the different approaches and processes of C&D waste management in the City of Jos, in the Plateau State of Nigeria. The mix method was adopted for this research whereby quantitative and qualitative data was collected through a structured questionnaire for construction enterprises, as well as face-to-face interviews with the agencies responsible for waste management in the city. A total of 21 construction companies (representing about 10%) were randomly selected for questionnaire administration while interviews were conducted with the Plateau Environmental Protection and Sanitation Agency (PEPSA) and the Jos Metropolitan Development Board (JMDB) who are responsible for waste management. Investigations revealed that C&D waste consists of heavy and non-degradable materials such as: sheet metal roofing, sand, gravel, concrete, masonry, metal, and wood to mention only a few. The construction companies are solely responsible for: the collection, storage, transportation and disposal of wastes generated from their activities. Approximately 60-70% of the C&D waste materials are either reused, recycled or resold, while the remaining residual waste is indiscriminately disposed. Although the PEPSA and JMDB are responsible for waste management, their focus has been on establishing solid non-hazardous waste infrastructure systems, policies and plans. The absence of records of the quantity of C&D waste generated, the lack of financial data, and the omission of policies and plans for the C&D waste stream has resulted in a missed opportunity for a comprehensive and sustainable waste management strategy for the City and the state. To protect public health, valuable resources, and natural ecosystems, it is recommended that the C&D waste stream be included as part of the state’s waste management program, in consideration of the growing construction and demolition activity, by including C&D policies and guidelines.
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Pătrașcu, Alexandra. "Motivation of high school students - factor in the formation of geography specific skills in the context of scientific thinking." In Condiții pedagogice de optimizare a învățării în post criză pandemică prin prisma dezvoltării gândirii științifice. "Ion Creanga" State Pedagogical University, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.46728/c.18-06-2021.p91-95.

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The purpose of this article is to highlight the most important aspect aimed at the formation of geography-specific skills in high school students, namely the motivation to learn in the context of the current health crisis. Currently, learning geography is based on the independent work of the student, according to the current methodology, as a result the student becomes his own teacher following the formation of his personality. In the first part of the article we mentioned the perception of learning motivation, in a school context current , by defining according to some authors, and in the second part the role of motivation in the formation of geographical skills in high school students. In this context, the teacher is the main agent of change in the education system, it is a model of learning for students, a model of motivation for all types of learning and the determining element in forming the geographical skills of students inside and outside the school. It must have a different approach depending on the situation and the motivation problems of the students which are diverse and different.
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Martins, João. "Design of products to honor people post mortem." In Systems & Design: Beyond Processes and Thinking. Universitat Politècnica València, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/ifdp.2016.3323.

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The cemeterial units, are places of social practices of everyday life and worship and the tomb where nostalgia can be externalized and the memory of the deceased revered. In Western societies we can find a category of artifacts meant to evoke the memory or honor the dead. In this paper we we mention three examples of products that enabled a reflection on the concepts that gave rise to their ways, and that risks to fit them into a new "material culture", in that it may have created a break with the traditional system codes and standards shared by companies, and its manifestations in relation to the physical creation of this category of products. This work offers a reflection on the Design Products.What probably makes it special is the field where it is located: the design of products in one post mortem memory. Usually made of granite rock or marble, have the form of plate or tablet, open book or rolled sheet. On one side have a photograph of the person who intend to honor and inscriptions. The thought of inherent design of this work put on one side the intricate set of emotions that this type of product can generate, and other components more affordable, and concerning the form, function and object interactions with users and with use environments. In the definition of the problem it was regarded as mandatory requirements: differentiation, added value and durability as key objectives.The first two should be manifested in the various components / product attributes. The aesthetic and material/structural durability of product necessarily imply the introduction of qualifying terms and quantitative weights, which positively influence the generation and evaluation of concepts based on the set of 10 principles for the project that originated a matrix as a tool to aid designing products. The concrete definition of a target audience was equally important. At this stage, the collaboration of other experts in the fields of psychology and sociology as disciplines with particular ability to understand individuals and social phenomena respectively was crucial. It was concluded that a product design to honor someone post mortem, should abandon the more traditional habits and customs to focus on identifying new audiences. Although at present it can be considered a niche market, it is believed that in the future may grow as well as their interest in this type of products.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/IFDP.2016.3323
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Zandipoor, Afshin, and Reza Shamloo. "Influences of Final Pipe Forming Process by Roll Bending Method on the Mechanical Properties of SAW Pipes." In 2010 8th International Pipeline Conference. ASMEDC, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/ipc2010-31014.

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There are three main methods and process for forming pipes from plates “Roll Bending”, “JCOE” and “UOE”. In all of the above mentioned ways part of the pipe will remain flat, and can not achieve the desired curvature of the pipe. These areas are generally at the two longitudinal edges of the open seam pipes. For obviation of these flat areas at the longitudinal edges of the pipe, the pre forming machines for “JCOE” and “UOE” processes, and the post bending machine for “the Roll Bending” process are used. In the post bending machine the final shape of the pipes is determined based on the rate of the machine hoist pressure and the spaces between the rolling dies. These parameters can have various effects on the mechanical properties of the final welded pipes. In the research that has been conducted at SAFA Rolling & Pipe Mill Company, the amount of hoist pressure and the final shape of the open seam pipes in the post bending machine, and their influences on the mechanical properties of the welded pipes, have been investigated herein.
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Jouan, Benoit, Jürgen Rudolph, and Steffen Bergholz. "Fatigue Monitoring System and Post-Processing of Temperature Measurements: Surge Line Under Stratification Loading." In ASME 2015 Pressure Vessels and Piping Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/pvp2015-45676.

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The ageing management of power plants is nowadays a main issue for all nuclear industry actors: states, regulatory agencies, operators, designers or suppliers. Consequently, lots of operators have to deal with demanding safety requirements to ensure the operation of power plants particularly in the context of lifetime extension. With regard of the fatigue assessment of nuclear components, stringent safety standards are synonymous of new parameters to take into account in the fatigue analysis process such as for instance: new design of fatigue curves particularly for austenitic stainless steels, the consideration of environmentally assisted fatigue (EAF) and stratification effects. In this context AREVA developed within the integral approach AREVA Fatigue Concept (AFC) new tools and methods to live up to operators expectations. The last mentioned stratification issue will be focused on in the framework of this dedicated paper. Based on measured thermal loads, the Fast Fatigue Evaluation (FFE) process allows for highly-automated and reliable data processing to evaluate time-dependent cumulative usage factors of mechanical components. This method has recently been extended to the consideration of stratification loading with surge line application. The paper presents the latest AREVA research and development activities on the FFE method applied to a surge line under stratification thermal loading. An additional CFD analysis was performed in order to calculate realistic thermal loadings during start-up conditions of nuclear power plant conditions. The FFE methodology was used to calculate thermal stress at all relevant locations. This approach opens the possibility of a realistic CUF calculation. The methodology, the principle results and benefits are presented in the paper.
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Barro, Christophe, Frédéric Tschanz, Peter Obrecht, and Konstantinos Boulouchos. "Influence of Post-Injection Parameters on Soot Formation and Oxidation in a Common-Rail-Diesel Engine Using Multi-Color-Pyrometry." In ASME 2012 Internal Combustion Engine Division Fall Technical Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icef2012-92075.

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The emission trade-off between soot and NOx is an issue of major concern in automotive diesel applications. Measures need to be taken both on the engine and on the aftertreatment sides in order to optimize the engine emissions while maintaining the highest possible efficiency. It is known that post injections have a potential for exhaust soot reduction without any significant influence in the NOx emissions. However, an accurate and general rule of how to parameterize a post injection such that it provides a maximum reduction of soot emissions does not exist. Moreover, the underlying mechanisms are not understood in detail. The experimental investigation presented here provides insight into the fundamental mechanisms of soot formation and reduction due to post injections under different turbulence and reaction kinetic conditions. In parallel to the measurement of soot elementary carbon in the exhaust (using a Photo Acoustic Soot Sensor), the in-cylinder soot formation and oxidation process have been investigated with an Optical Light Probe (OLP). This sensor provides crank angle resolved information about the in-cylinder soot evolution. The experiments confirm conclusions of earlier works that soot reduction due to a post injection is mainly based on two reasons: increased turbulence (from the post injection) during soot oxidation and lower soot formation due to lower amount of fuel in the main combustion at similar load conditions. A third effect of heat addition during the soot oxidation, which was often mentioned in the literature, could not be confirmed. In addition, the experiments show that variations of turbulence (from swirl) and reaction kinetics have a minor influence on the diffusion controlled heat release rate. However, the time phasing of the soot evolution is highly influenced by these variations with only small changes in the peak soot concentration. It is shown that the soot reduction of a post injection depends on the timing. More precisely, the soot reduction capability of a post injection decreases rapidly as soon as its timing is late in the soot oxidation phase. The soot oxidation rate can only be improved by increased turbulence and heat addition from the post injection in a time window before the in-cylinder soot peak occurs. Depending on EGR and swirl level, a maximum dwell time can be defined after which the post injection effect becomes counterproductive with respect to the soot oxidation rate.
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Suleymanov, Elchin, Farhad Rahmanov, and Anar Eminov. "Comparative Analysis of Budget Expenditures on Social Sphere in Russia, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan." In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c08.01840.

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Azerbaijan, Russia and Kazakhstan as Post-Soviet countries are known fortheir oil-gas industry and its huge share in their economies. Considering these mentioned points, these countries are supposed to be the most relevant countries for common analysis. The role of social related expenditures in the state budgets was examined throughout the years for all three countries comparatively. By this analysis, it is targeted to define the differences and similarities in budget structure of these countries. Due to specific relevant structures and to resource-rich points, these countries have different revenue and expenditure policies than other post-soviet countries. These countries manage oil revenues to improve social-economic conditions of the country. Accordance of increasing oil revenues, education, health, and social defense expenditures as main social expenditure types in these countries increased until recent oil price shocks. Considering huge share of oil sector in these countries, it is crucial to examine the impacts of recent decline of oil prices on social expenditures in these countries. In this study, share of social related expenditures in the budget of these countries are comparatively analyzed in the period 1992 and 2015 years.
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Asgharzadeh Shishavan, Reza, David V. Brower, John D. Hedengren, and Alexis D. Brower. "New Advances in Post-Installed Subsea Monitoring Systems for Structural and Flow Assurance Evaluation." In ASME 2014 33rd International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/omae2014-24300.

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An overview of fiber optic sensors for temperature, pressure, strain, and fatigue of subsea structures is provided. Current progress details efforts to ensure proper installation and bonding to existing risers, flow-lines, mooring lines, trees, and other structures in actual subsea environments. Developments include clamp prototypes, bonding techniques, long-term fatigue analysis, sensor calibration, and temperature compensation. Fiber optic technology in subsea monitoring began over 20 years ago by migrating expertise from decommissioning of rocket motors. The first installations were on new installations of subsea pipelines, production risers, and drilling risers to measure strain and vibration for fatigue life monitoring. Of particular interest for these systems were detecting riser vortex induced vibration and strain throughout the touchdown zone. A prior limitation was that sensor installation was only performed top-side on new subsea equipment. This recent work demonstrates the capability to deploy on existing subsea equipment. The novel contributions of this study are the developments that optimize the clamp design, bonding techniques, and factors that allow long-term service life. Button pull tests validate long term service life after the clamps are subjected to accelerated aging tests. Details on the subsea calibration also provide insight on the recent progress with post-installed sensors. The purpose of reliable post-installed advanced sensors is not only to detect failures of subsea infrastructure but also to warn of signs of fatigue or hydrate formation that contribute to catastrophic failures. The calibration and testing mentioned in this paper are part of the Clear Gulf study, a collaboration formed in 2010 between the offshore energy industry and NASA. The study continues to make advances in highly sensitive monitoring systems that anticipate failures, catastrophic events, and flow assurance issues.
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