Results for 'Poetic image'

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  1. The Poetic Image.Martin Warner - 2012 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 71:105-128.
    W. B. Yeats's great celebration of the human imagination, ‘Byzantium’, of which these are the first and last verses, is concerned with the tension, reconciliation and movement between two types of sensibility, the sensual and the spiritual, that of natural life and that of transcendent symbol, in this poem imaged as ‘the fury and the mire of human veins’ and as ‘bird or golden handiwork . . . of changeless metal’. In it, as Richard Ellmann puts it, ‘the teeming images, (...)
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  2. The poetic image.Martin Warner - 2013 - In Anthony O'Hear (ed.), Philosophy and the Arts. New York: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  3.  46
    The Role of Poetic Image in Gaston Bachelard’s Contribution to Architecture.Susan NoorMohammadi - 2015 - Environmental Philosophy 12 (1):67-85.
    This paper addresses Gaston Bachelard’s phenomenology of imagination. In his book The Poetics of Space, Bachelard stresses two major elements that are significant in the creation of real images: imagination and memory. Throughout The Poetics of Space, he speaks explicitly of houses of memory and dreams and homes of childhood. However Bachelard does not speak directly of architecture, his contribution to architecture needs to be analyzed and interpreted precisely. This objective is accomplished by arguing for two basic concepts in Bachelard’s (...)
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  4. Williams James and his "poetic" image of social order.John W. Murphy - 1986 - Diálogos. Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad de Puerto Rico 21 (48):83.
     
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  5.  19
    Illusion and the poetic image.Judith Dundas - 1973 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 32 (2):197-203.
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    Illusion and the Poetic Image.Judith Dundas - 1969 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 28 (2):197-204.
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  7.  15
    The aesthetic and the poetic image.Jennifer Anna Gosetti-Ferencei - 2003 - Philosophy Today 47 (5):107-117.
  8.  22
    The Aesthetic and the Poetic Image: Beyond Ekphrasic Aesthetics with Rilke and Cézanne.Jennifer Anna Gosetti-Ferencei - 2003 - Philosophy Today 47 (Supplement):107-117.
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  9.  17
    The Poetic Structure in Kemalettin Kamu’s Poems: Image, Language and Style.Özden Apaydin - 2012 - Journal of Turkish Studies 7:215-232.
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  10.  9
    The Intensive-Image and the Poetic Film Tradition: Notes on Ruiz, Deren, Pasolini, Buñuel and Deleuze.Cristóbal Escobar - 2023 - Film-Philosophy 27 (3):424-442.
    This article analyses an important category from Deleuze's philosophy – the notion of intensity – and explores its significance for Deleuze and the ways it can be used to think about poetic cinema. I use the concept of the intensive-image to define a cinematic style that dissipates narrative action in favour of more contemplative and sensory experiences, hence films that are able to turn onscreen reality into purely affective phenomena. The notion of intensity, I argue, does not allow (...)
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  11.  65
    The world and image of poetic language: Heidegger and Blanchot.Jennifer Gosetti-Ferencei - 2012 - Continental Philosophy Review 45 (2):189-212.
    This essay engages ways in which the manifestation of ‘world’ occurs in poetry specifically through images, and how we can conceive of the imagination in this regard without reducing the imagination to a mimetic faculty of consciousness subordinate to cognition. Continental thought in the last century offers rich resources for this study. The notion of a ‘world’ is related to the poetic image in ways fundamental to the Heidegger’s theory of language, and may be seen in Continental poetics (...)
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  12.  14
    Preaching as art (imaging the unseen) and art as homiletics (verbalising the unseen): Towards the aesthetics of iconic thinking and poetic communication in homiletics.Daniel Louw - 2016 - HTS Theological Studies 72 (2):14.
    The article investigates the hypothesis that preaching implies more than merely verbalising, proclaiming and rhetoric reasoning. Preaching is fundamentally the art of poetic seeing; an aesthetic event on an ontic and spiritual level; that is, it provides vocabulary and images in order to help people to discover meaning in life (preaching as the art of foolishness). In this regard, preaching should provide God-images that open up the dimension of aesthetics and provide vistas of the ‘unseen’. The iconic dimension of (...)
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  13.  16
    A female saint in Anglo-Saxon poetic tradition: stylistic and linguocultural peculiarities of the image.O. V. Tomberg - 2017 - Liberal Arts in Russia 6 (4):312-321.
    The article devoted to the study of an artistic image of female saint from stylistic and linguocultural perspectives. The image is represented by the characters of Judith and Juliana in Anglo-Saxon literature. Stylistic peculiarities of the image are result of the fact that it emerges as a combination of heroic and religious genres. Thus, two genre pictures of the world account for characteristics of the image: on the one hand, it is described by epithets relating to (...)
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  14. On looking and reading: word and image, visual poetics, and comparative arts.M. G. Bal - 1989 - Semiotica 3:283-320.
     
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  15.  27
    The Poetic Structure of the World: Copernicus and Kepler.Fernand Hallyn - 1990 - Zone Books.
    The Poetic Structure of the World is a major reconsideration of a crucial turningpoint in Western thought and culture: the heliocentric revolution of Copernicus and Kepler. FernandHallyn treats the work of these two figures not simply in terms of the history of science orastronomy, but as events embedded in a wider field of images, symbols, texts, and practices. Thesenew representations of the universe, he insists, cannot be explained by recourse to explanations of"genius" or "intuition."Instead, Hallyn investigates the problem of (...)
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  16.  16
    Place and Passage in the Chinese Arts: Visual Images and Poetic Analogues.Esther Jacobson-Leong - 1976 - Critical Inquiry 3 (2):345-368.
    In a society which traditionally valued the moral and expressive forces of art, landscape painting became one of the most esteemed art forms. In China, "landscape" has always meant what its Chinese name—shan shui —implies: paintings dominated by peaks and streams supplemented by trees, rocks, mists, and plunging waterfalls. Despite major changes in style, landscape painting in China between the eighth and eighteenth centuries was remarkably stable in subject matter. Chinese artists painted the natural settings which surrounded them in their (...)
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  17. On Occasion of the public Defence of the Dissertation: Thought in image Sren Kierkegaard's poetics.Isak Winkel Holm - 1999 - Kierkegaardiana 20:139-148.
     
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  18. pt. 2. Literature as dialogue. The poetics of dialogue : the human image.Maurice Friedman - 2011 - In Kenneth Kramer (ed.), Dialogically speaking: Maurice Friedman's interdisciplinary humanism. Eugene, Or.: Pickwick Publications.
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  19.  11
    Poetic Justice and Edith Wharton’s “Xingu”: An Evolutionary Psychological Approach.Judith P. Saunders - 2017 - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture 1 (1):173-180.
    Insights generated in the emerging field of evolutionary psychology offer a useful new framework for examining Edith Wharton's “Xingu.” The satiric wit energizing this well-known short story depends in large measure upon the obtuseness of its central characters, who embrace counterfactual estimations of their gifts and attainments: thwarting the operations of poetic justice in order to protect social reputation and self-image, they become objects of derision. Their behavior illustrates the workings of adaptive mechanisms for self-deception. Insofar as their (...)
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  20.  18
    The Poetics of Mimesis in Plato’s Timaeus-Critias.Nelson de Aguiar Menezes Neto - 2020 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 30:03016-03016.
    The present study is an analysis of Plato’s _Timaeus-Critias_ composition process, from the point of view of discourse modeling. It intends to show that the dialogue is distinguished by an insightful articulation of composition techniques, which combine the pictorial and dramatic aspects of poetic _mimesis_. Establishing the Panateneias as an implicit reference, the work presents the performance of a sequence of narratives, produced as true discursive images. Platonic originality is revealed in _Timaeus-Critias_, therefore, as the accomplishment of a formal (...)
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  21. Phénoménologie de l’image poétique.Marc Richir - 2008 - Studia Phaenomenologica 8:187-197.
    The poetic image results from the effort undertaken by affectivity to express itself in a language that is not originally its very own, but that holds the advantage of being communicable not only at the level of representation, but at the level of feeling as well. The image is not considered, therefore, to be a synthesis of true and false. In the process of creation, the affect is the material principle of the image as an ideal (...)
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  22.  28
    The Poetics of Space. [REVIEW]B. D. A. - 1965 - Review of Metaphysics 18 (4):771-772.
    This book is primarily for the patient and empathetic poetaster; it is a treasure-chest of themes on the imagination, metaphor, day-dream, and memory. Bachelard presents a phenomenology of the poetic image of inner or inhabited space, or what he terms "felicitous space." Inner space refers not only to the house of man but to the houses of things, drawers, chests, and wardrobes, and to the houses of animals, nests and shells. Bachelard's method is to articulate the many reverberations (...)
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  23.  21
    Phénoménologie de l’image poétique.Marc Richir - 2008 - Studia Phaenomenologica 8:187-197.
    The poetic image results from the effort undertaken by affectivity to express itself in a language that is not originally its very own, but that holds the advantage of being communicable not only at the level of representation, but at the level of feeling as well. The image is not considered, therefore, to be a synthesis of true and false. In the process of creation, the affect is the material principle of the image as an ideal (...)
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  24. The Poetic Structure of the World: Copernicus and Kepler.Donald M. Leslie (ed.) - 1990 - Zone Books.
    The Poetic Structure of the World is a major reconsideration of a crucial turning point in Western thought and culture: the heliocentric revolution of Copernicus and Kepler. Fernand Hallyn treats the work of these two figures not simply in terms of the history of science or astronomy, but as events embedded in a wider field of images, symbols, texts, and practices. These new representations of the universe, he insists, cannot be explained by recourse to explanations of "genius" or "intuition."Instead, (...)
     
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  25.  14
    The Poetic Structure of the World: Copernicus and Kepler.Donald M. Leslie (ed.) - 1993 - Zone Books.
    The Poetic Structure of the World is a major reconsideration of a crucial turning point in Western thought and culture: the heliocentric revolution of Copernicus and Kepler. Fernand Hallyn treats the work of these two figures not simply in terms of the history of science or astronomy, but as events embedded in a wider field of images, symbols, texts, and practices. These new representations of the universe, he insists, cannot be explained by recourse to explanations of "genius" or "intuition."Instead, (...)
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  26.  12
    The Poetic Way of Thinking.Krzysztof Ziarek - 2022 - Research in Phenomenology 52 (1):68-83.
    Heidegger repeatedly performs the encounter of thinking and poetry, explicitly for the sake of inaugurating a non-metaphysical way of thinking. This transformed thinking is to be poetic and non-conceptual, eschewing the comfort of transparent meaning, the grasping power of concepts, the presentational force of images, or the self-evident correctness of propositional statements. The need for such a non-metaphysical thinking arises historically, at the endpoint of the epoch of the completion of metaphysics, when it comes to roost in the Gestell, (...)
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  27.  16
    Poetics of Advocacy: Womanhood and Feminist Identity in Patricia Jabbeh Wesley’s Where the Road Turns.Bartholomew Chizoba Akpah - 2020 - SOCRATES 8 (2spl):14-25.
    The crux of feminist ideological alignments is the struggle for the woman’s liberation from patriarchal subjectivities. This study investigates the utilization of poetry by Patricia Jabbeh Wesley to challenge patriarchal dominance and expose the gimmicks of female devaluation by hegemonic imperialism. Wesley’s poems: “Inequality in Hell” and “My Auntie’s Woman-Lappa Husband” which sufficiently explore feminist consciousness from Wesley’s poetry collection, Where the Road Turns, were purposively selected and subjected to close reading and qualitative analysis. The poems were critically analyzed through (...)
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  28.  5
    The poetics of identity making: precarity and agency in Tahmima Anam’s The Good Muslim.Xin Yan Chew & Moussa Pourya Asl - 2023 - Journal for Cultural Research 28 (1):86-101.
    Bangladesh experienced a massive surge in humanitarian crises after the 1971 Liberation War due to the systematic use of violence at both public and private spheres. Fictional accounts of the post-conflict period depict women as subjected to institutionalised sexism and aggravated physical and mental violence. Critical studies on such narratives often reiterate a stereotypical and essentialising discourse surrounding women’s identity, characterising them as helpless and passive victims of discrimination and exploitation. Drawing upon Judith Butler’s notions of precarity and agency, we (...)
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  29.  11
    Images that move.Patricia Spyer & Mary Margaret Steedly (eds.) - 2013 - Santa Fe: SAR Press.
    Images That Move is concerned with how images take place in wider worlds: how they move around, via processes of transmission and uptake, but, equally importantly, how they move their audiences affectively. Images play a significant part in projects of "poetic world-making" and political transformation. They participate in the production of commensuration or of incommensurability, enact moments of prophecy or exposure, and attract or repel spectators' attention. Images move, then, but not just as they wish, and any examination of (...)
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  30.  18
    Poetic Language in Plato’s Cratylus.Elizabeth Hill - 2023 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 28 (1):59-74.
    This paper addresses Socrates’ claim in the Cratylus that he and Hermogenes must learn of the correctness of names from “Homer and the other poets.” I argue that, in treating poetry as the starting point for investigating the relationship of language to reality, Plato reveals language to be a discursive articulation of non-discursive divine Being. Thus, while language cannot fully capture Being once and for all, it can function as a moving image of it by being kept in continual (...)
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  31.  14
    The Poetics of Surrender: An Exposition and Critique of New Critical Poetics.Richard Strier - 1975 - Critical Inquiry 2 (1):171-189.
    Like the determinist, the New Critic must proceed by assuming what he hopes to prove; he assumes the existence of "objective" relations between the words of the poem he is studying and then attempts to perceive such relations.1 The distinction between "objective"—that is, in some sense verifiable—and purely subjective or personal meaning must necessarily be a central one for this type of poetics. New Critics are constantly protesting that they are not "reading into" works, that the meanings they ascribe to (...)
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  32. Investigative Poetics: In (night)-Light of Akilah Oliver.Feliz Molina - 2011 - Continent 1 (2):70-75.
    continent. 1.2 (2011): 70-75. cartography of ghosts . . . And as a way to talk . . . of temporality the topography of imagination, this body whose dirty entry into the articulation of history as rapturous becoming & unbecoming, greeted with violence, i take permission to extend this grace —Akilah Oliver from “An Arriving Guard of Angels Thusly Coming To Greet” Our disappearance is already here. —Jacques Derrida, 117 I wrestled with death as a threshold, an aporia, a bandit, (...)
     
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  33.  11
    Poetic Presence and Illusion: Renaissance Theory and the Duplicity of Metaphor.Murray Krieger - 1979 - Critical Inquiry 5 (4):597-619.
    Our usual view of the Renaissance poetic, as we derive it from the explicit statements which we normally cite, sees it primarily as a rhetorical theory which is essentially Platonic in the universal meanings behind individual words, images, or fictions. Accordingly, poetic words, images, or fictions are taken to be purely allegorical, functioning as arbitrary or at most as conventional signs: each word, image, or fiction is seen as thoroughly dispensable, indeed interchangeable with others, to be used (...)
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  34.  27
    Poetic experience and the good life in the writings of Michael Oakeshott.Glenn Worthington - 2005 - European Journal of Political Theory 4 (1):57-66.
    The article argues that attending to Oakeshott’s characterization of poetic experience shows his moral philosophy to possess dimensions that can be otherwise overlooked. The first of these dimensions is the authenticity or success with which a self realizes or creates itself as a moral being. The second area of Oakeshott’s moral philosophy that is brought to light by attending to his account of poetic experience is his account of society as a tapestry of moral images.
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  35.  66
    Image and Truth: On Plato’s Symposium.Günter Figal - 2003 - Prolegomena 2 (2):157-166.
    The Symposium is one of Plato’s most literary and poetic dialogues. How might one reconcile this evidence of Plato’s predilection for poetry in light of his severe critique of poetry in the Republic? Though his critique is modified and refined in other dialogues, the power of his critique is nowhere significantly undermined. I argue in this paper that Plato’s poetic writing is not inconsistent with his critique, and that in fact there is an affinity between his practice of (...)
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  36.  64
    Image and Word.Günter Figal - 2003 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 7 (2):251-259.
    The Symposium is one of Plato’s most literary and poetic dialogues. How might one reconcile this evidence of Plato’s predilection for poetry in light of his severe critique of poetry in the Republic? Though his critique is modified and refined in other dialogues, the power of his critique is nowhere significantly undermined. I argue in this paper that Plato’s poetic writing is not inconsistent with his critique, and that in fact there is an affinity between his practice of (...)
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  37.  13
    Image and Word.Günter Figal - 2003 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 7 (2):251-259.
    The Symposium is one of Plato’s most literary and poetic dialogues. How might one reconcile this evidence of Plato’s predilection for poetry in light of his severe critique of poetry in the Republic? Though his critique is modified and refined in other dialogues, the power of his critique is nowhere significantly undermined. I argue in this paper that Plato’s poetic writing is not inconsistent with his critique, and that in fact there is an affinity between his practice of (...)
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  38. Phénoménologie de l’image poétique.Jad Hatem - 2008 - Studia Phaenomenologica 8:187-197.
    The poetic image results from the effort undertaken by affectivity to express itself in a language that is not originally its very own, but that holds the advantage of being communicable not only at the level of representation, but at the level of feeling as well. The image is not considered, therefore, to be a synthesis of true and false. In the process of creation, the affect is the material principle of the image as an ideal (...)
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  39.  8
    Poetics of Imagining: Modern and Post-modern.Richard Kearney - 1998 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    What is Imagination? What is the relationship between aesthetics and ethics in a contemporary civilization dominated by the image? How can we reconcile the right to imagine with the right to justice? Are the claims of artistic creativity and moral responsibility compatible? With an extended foreword and an afterword chapter, and fascinating new material on the narrative imagination, Poetics of Imagining: Modern to Post-modern provides a critically developed and accessible account of the major theories of imagination in modern European (...)
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  40.  8
    Somatic poetics.Clea T. Waite - 2020 - Technoetic Arts 18 (2):267-277.
    This article considers scientific data and methods taken as a vocabulary for a visual language of poetics, shaping an artistic practice exploring the liminal poetics of space, time, science and mythology, equally considered. These artworks focus on the moving image as an immersive, architectonic construct, one that makes it possible to blur the boundary between space and time. They are cinematic environments that create a space of spatial and temporal ambiguity, open to the performative role of the viewer in (...)
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  41.  13
    Phénoménologie de l’image poétique.Jad Hatem - 2008 - Studia Phaenomenologica 8:187-197.
    The poetic image results from the effort undertaken by affectivity to express itself in a language that is not originally its very own, but that holds the advantage of being communicable not only at the level of representation, but at the level of feeling as well. The image is not considered, therefore, to be a synthesis of true and false. In the process of creation, the affect is the material principle of the image as an ideal (...)
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  42.  19
    Eighteenth-century Stoic poetics: Shaftesbury, Akenside, and the discipline of the imagination.Alexandra Bacalu - 2023 - Boston: Brill.
    Eighteenth-Century Stoic Poetics: Shaftesbury, Akenside, and the Discipline of the Imagination offers a fresh perspective on the eighteenth-century poetics of Lord Shaftesbury and Mark Akenside. This book traces the two authors' debt to Roman Stoic spiritual exercises and early modern conceptions of the care of the self, which informs their view of the poetic imagination as a bundle of techniques designed to manage impressions, cultivate right images in the mind and rectify judgement. Alexandra Bacalu traces the roots of this (...)
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  43.  59
    Actual Image | Virtual Cut: Schizoanalysis and Montage.Hanjo Berressem - 2011 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 5 (2):177-208.
    If a machine is something that cuts into a continuous flow, schizoanalysis can be read, quite literally, as an analysis of cuts. In cinematic registers, it is an analysis of montage. Looking closely at a number of modes and moments of montage in the work of Alfred Hitchcock, this paper shows how his strategies of ‘reciprocally presupposing’ actual image and virtual montage relate to a Deleuzian poetics and politics of the cinema.
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  44.  12
    Pictorialist Poetics: Poetry and the Visual Arts in Nineteenth-Century France.David H. T. Scott - 2009 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book offers a comprehensive description of how writers, in particular poets in nineteenth-century France, became increasingly aware of the visual element in writing from the point of view both of content and of the formal organisation of the words in the text. This interest encouraged writers such as Baudelaire, Mallarme and Rimbaud to recreate in language some of the vivid, sensual impact of the graphic or painterly image. This was to be achieved by organising texts according to aesthetic (...)
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  45.  30
    The Poetics of Ambivalence: Imagining and Unimagining the Political in Bilhaṇa’s Vikramāṅkadevacarita. [REVIEW]Yigal Bronner - 2010 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 38 (5):457-483.
    There is something quite deceptive about Bilhaṇa’s Vikramāṅkadevacarita , one of the most popular and oft-quoted works of the Sanskrit canon. The poem conforms perfectly to the stipulations of the mahākāvya genre: it is replete with descriptions of bravery in battle and amorous plays with beautiful women; its language is intensified by a powerful arsenal of ornaments and images; and it portrays its main hero, King Vikramāṅka VI of the Cāḷukya dynasty (r. 1076–1126), as an equal of Rāma. At the (...)
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  46.  17
    Fragments of a poetics of fire.Gaston Bachelard - 1990 - Dallas: Dallas Institute Publications, Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture.
    The publication of FRAGMENTS OF A POETICS OF FIRE is a milestone in Bachelard studies that will influence the way we think about his themes & method for a long time to come. Dissatisfied with his earlier attempt to come to terms with the element of fire in "The Psychoanalysis of Fire" (1937), Bachelard returned to this theme in the book he was working on at the time of his death in 1962. Because of delays in &, eventually, the abandonment (...)
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  47.  53
    The Embodied Image: Imagination and Imagery in Architecture.Juhani Pallasmaa - 2011 - Wiley.
    Introduction -- Image in contemporary culture -- Language, thought and image -- The many faces of the image -- The anatomy of the poetic image -- The architectural image.
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  48.  19
    Farce and the Poetics of the "Vraisemblable".Menachem Brinker - 1983 - Critical Inquiry 9 (3):565-577.
    French theorists have recently proposed a theory which describes all literature in terms of the probable, the vraisemblable.6 This poetics of the probable commences with a purely relativistic claim. What is probable not only changes in accordance with the audience’s concept of reality but also changes in accordance with the needs of the story and with the narrative possibilities open to various genres. It includes all of the norms and models making a given text understandable to the reader, however outlandish (...)
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  49. Bleeding Words: Louise Bourgeois' and José Leonilson's Love Images.Beck Ana Lucia & Berwanger Maria - 2016 - PKn Comparative Literature 39 (JUNE 2016):141-161.
    As one tries to grasp love and its images within José Leonilson's production, a multiplicity of aspects and meanings are seen that also relate to Louise Bourgeois's oeuvre in regard to the interest in human relations. Through a comparative approach to both artists' poetics, an understanding is created that love is not a simplistic action and all the words read in or applied to their visual discourse must be considered within a wide range of love in visual and literary images. (...)
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  50.  8
    True Images: Metaphor, Metonymy and Montage in Marcel Proust's A la recherche du temps perdu and Jean-Luc Godard's Histoire(s) du cinéma.Miriam Heywood - 2010 - Paragraph 33 (1):37-51.
    This article compares the poetics of Marcel Proust's A la recherche du temps perdu and Jean-Luc Godard's Histoire du cinéma in order to realign our understanding of metaphor, metonymy and montage with the inter-formal dialogues that new media artworks increasingly demand of audiences. An analysis of Godard's ‘quotation’ of Proust's words and ideas from Le Temps retrouvé sets out an explicit rivalry between text and image. However, drawing on formalist and structuralist approaches to both literature and cinema, including Roman (...)
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