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Journal Article
Poetics Today (2018) 39 (2): 319–335.
Published: 01 June 2018
... to collaborate with him by writing poems in response to sheets of calligraphic marks, Ingmire then produces highly artistic, calligraphic versions of the poems. In the example I discuss, the poem was then produced as an artist’s book by a Japanese artist using ancient paper-folding and bookmaking techniques...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2004) 25 (1): 29–66.
Published: 01 March 2004
...Jeffrey Pence Cinema's power to represent animate life, and produce a profound impression of reality, warrants and supports its other fascinating capacity, namely, to fabricate frank yet appealing illusions. In certain instances, audiences may respond to the fantastic creations as if to a new...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2001) 22 (2): 475–513.
Published: 01 June 2001
...Loren Kruger; Patricia Watson Shariff This article examines the ways comics contribute to nonformal education in contemporary South Africa, especially the Heart to Heart project,produced by the Storyteller Group, and Body and Soul , by the Soul City project. While Soul City follows the urban bias...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2016) 37 (4): 517–538.
Published: 01 December 2016
... by which the sign mediates among three poles: the producer of the sign, the receiver of the sign, and the object of their joint attention. In the third part, taking Boccaccio's Decameron as an example, I illustrate how this approach to the semiotics of narrative elucidates aspects of literary narrative...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2005) 26 (1): 79–111.
Published: 01 March 2005
... considered low-class literature. For “good” literature, according to Relevance Theory, is characterized by a complexity and multiplicity of contextual effects produced fundamentally by way of weak implicature. © 2005 by the Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics 2005 Amis, Kingsley 1977 Lucky...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2007) 28 (4): 607–618.
Published: 01 December 2007
...Joshua Landy How similar is Proust's Recherche to Dante's Commedia ? Not very, as it turns out. In the first place, Proust's protagonist does not require an experience of ideal love as a precondition for conversion: Mlle de Saint-Loup is no Beatrice. And in the second, what he produces...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2009) 30 (2): 207–235.
Published: 01 June 2009
... thing the “turn to ethics” in literary studies has produced is a rise in popularity of Emmanuel Levinas among critics. The invocation of Levinasian responsibility, with its refusal to entertain a practical or normative ethics, demonstrates, among other things, how far some streams of ethical criticism...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2009) 30 (3): 561–607.
Published: 01 September 2009
...Howard Sklar This essay examines some of the ways that narratives produce sympathy in readers. First, I compare several models that have been proposed to explain how fictional texts structure readers' emotional responses. In this connection, I highlight some of the ways that narratological analyses...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2010) 31 (4): 721–785.
Published: 01 December 2010
...”) of narrative texts: author, narrator, reader, spectator, character. Thus to explain narrative humor is to show how narrative enables its participants (“agents”) to produce humor. I analyze some types of narrative humor: “metanarrative humor,” “comic narrative suspense,” and “comic narrative surprise.” Some...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2011) 32 (4): 619–662.
Published: 01 December 2011
..., which orients attention not to emergent meanings or achieved mental representations but rather to underlying processes of meaning-making and representation that precede, produce, and ceaselessly replace any such products of (literary) cognition. Section 3 attributes this peculiarly dynamic effect...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2012) 33 (1): 59–126.
Published: 01 March 2012
... to perceive incongruity and feel superiority, narrative is not defined by incongruity and superiority, although it can produce them. Third, part I went on to redefine the composite concept “narrative humor,” describing it as the production and/or exploitation of incongruity and superiority relations among...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2013) 34 (4): 519–562.
Published: 01 December 2013
... of the Sphinx, which is right, single, and intended. I also consider various interpretations produced by other critics and show why they are not acceptable. © 2014 by Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics 2014 I gratefully acknowledge the generous editorial assistance I received from Meir...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2014) 35 (3): 303–323.
Published: 01 September 2014
... translations, Einspruch produced a version that, in more fully mobilizing the Hebrew components of Yiddish, was designed to remind his Jewish readers that Christianity emerged in a Jewish context. This translation style also reflected and even embodied new trends in the conceptualization of conversion from...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2014) 35 (4): 591–613.
Published: 01 December 2014
...” and their “contamination” by social agents involved in the production process of the text, including typists, publishers, and editors. However, a few aspects of New Textualism create methodological aporias and produce, in extremo , a virtually unreadable compilation of parallel texts. Using some previously developed...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2017) 38 (3): 453–483.
Published: 01 September 2017
... Lukács, Walter Benjamin, Fredric Jameson). The discussion is in part descriptive and in part programmatic: a reconstruction that does not pretend to do full justice to any one of these thinkers independently but strives to outline a field, the various inflections of which produce complementary...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2017) 38 (4): 667–693.
Published: 01 December 2017
... reproduce specific events and their original responses. This article reveals how elisions of memory and story produce pathologies of embodiment in post-Shoah generations. Interrogating construction of physical bodies as archives, memory, and story, the article demonstrates how corporeality, memory...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2018) 39 (1): 159–181.
Published: 01 February 2018
... preconditions of modern style can be suggestively combined with Mikhail M. Bakhtin’s theory of the inherent multiplicity of novelistic discourse and Richard Walsh’s pragmatic theory of narrative “voice” to produce a core definition of style. Style is (1) a linguistic mode of social relation; (2) one of several...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2000) 21 (2): 393–421.
Published: 01 June 2000
... argues that Dr. Death is a variant of the fascist New Man, a new modality of corporeal subjectivity, produced through the utilization of the sublime experience of violence for ideological ends. Rooted in the aftershocks of the Darwinian revolution, the new perception of nature as cruel and rapacious...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2018) 39 (3): 429–445.
Published: 01 September 2018
... of scholarly collaboration through which the articles came about, and the different results it produced in each case. Copyright © 2018 Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics 2018 This content is made freely available by the publisher. It may not be redistributed or altered. All rights reserved...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2019) 40 (1): 7–31.
Published: 01 March 2019
... of the sociopolitical role fulfilled by such texts – and not less significantly by its producers and promoters – has now shifted to other industries. At the same time, in the context of intergroup competition for status based on the possession of symbolic goods, literature seems to have preserved its prestige value...
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