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return to the body
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Journal Article
Poetics Today (2021) 42 (4): 471–499.
Published: 01 December 2021
... in a hopeful call for openness. Copyright © 2021 by Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics 2021 Michel Foucault being of literature analytic of finitude anthropological reflection return to the body What need is there in literary studies today for a return to the writings of Michel...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2008) 29 (2): 277–308.
Published: 01 June 2008
... Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology, with contributions from Oudart's own phenomenological observations, and seeks to return the body (including its politics) to suture and to film narrative. The fundamental image drawn from Merleau-Ponty is the chiasmus, the film version of which is the shot/reverse shot...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2020) 41 (4): 475–501.
Published: 01 December 2020
... for engaging with form, and new possibilities for embodied poetry. By returning to Richards s original work and resisting the translation of physical data into cognitive insight, by giving the body attention on its own terms, we can unlockmore than a century of eye movement research, not to displace...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2020) 41 (3): 395–416.
Published: 01 September 2020
... developing bleeding from their eyes and orifices, weakening and, ulti- mately, dying once again. In Les Revenants, meanwhile, the returned cannot wander too far from each other, lest their bodies start to scar and decay, and, inexplicably, characters both living and dead seem unable to leave the valley...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2000) 21 (1): 61–93.
Published: 01 March 2000
...
of transgressions, her view of verbal and poetic disruptions as a return of
the body to language—all offer a dynamic concept of subjectivity and lan-
guage that can help us contextualize Yeshurun’s strategies of translation...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2008) 29 (3): 525–564.
Published: 01 September 2008
...) is the
new-made self of the beloved but a self strangely transferred to another,
the newly generated beautiful boy, his son.
How is this to be “new made”? Can a self be reproduced or reincarnated,
returned to a new starting point in a new body? While genetic resemblance
can be passed on from...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2005) 26 (4): 637–664.
Published: 01 December 2005
... (to return to Shklovsky’s example), a
hurting body would check to see if the sofa was in fact still dusty (something
that apparently did not occur to the vigorous Leo Tolstoy at age sixty-nine,
striding around the room with dust cloth in hand, thinking of other things,
and cleaning up the room the way he...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2004) 25 (4): 731–752.
Published: 01 December 2004
... lips, the poet
tells a friend, are pressed to your lips and my breath lives inside yours and
I then step back from your body, ‘‘It is because I feel my flesh confront me’’
Kinzel • Configuration and Government 741
(331). At the other end, the pupil’s return to himself...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2017) 38 (2): 213–233.
Published: 01 June 2017
... Radical Embodied Cognitive Science ( Cambridge, MA : MIT Press ). Clancey William J. 1997 Situated Cognition: On Human Knowledge and Computer Representation ( Cambridge : Cambridge University Press ). Clark Andy 1997 Being There: Putting Brain, Body, and World Together Again...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2017) 38 (2): 295–315.
Published: 01 June 2017
... is that of a
ball in a well. The deeper the well, the stronger the attraction, the more
Lutterbie † Feeling Beauty, Time, and the Body in Neuroaesthetics 299
energy required to move the ball out of it, and the more likely it will return to
it. The shallower the depression, the easier it is to move...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2017) 38 (4): 667–693.
Published: 01 December 2017
... from the desert, a story of exile in which the self is written.
Baum † The Body as Archive 675
displaced by her embodiment of the archive, a journey to which she is so
committed that she returns to the place of her mother’s (untold) stories,
seeking the place...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2017) 38 (2): 317–339.
Published: 01 June 2017
... not only organize but also re -organize, as the world turns, not only our literary experience but also our ethical and political thinking. Artists and poets return to old stories and reconsider old images not because they are, as Northrop Frye considered them, successfully integrated clusters, but because...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2016) 37 (3): 369–385.
Published: 01 September 2016
... 2004 No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive ( Durham, NC : Duke University Press ). Enright Anne 2007 The Gathering ( London : Jonathan Cape ). Greenway Judy 1998 “It's What You Do with It That Counts,” in Sexology in Culture: Labelling Bodies and Desires...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2022) 43 (4): 663–695.
Published: 01 December 2022
..., the narrative is about a subject who feels pain, and that subject who feels is me. (2008: 73) This leads Menary to the conclusion that “the self is, at least in part, a body” (79). I return to this in closing. More recently, Priscilla Brandon ( 2016 ) has pushed the point a step further, arguing...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2023) 44 (1-2): 291–294.
Published: 01 June 2023
... and Disability . New York : New York University Press . Twigg Juila . 2004. “The Body, Gender, and Age: Feminist Insights in Social Gerontology.” Journal of Aging Studies 18 , no. 1 : 59 – 73 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaging.2003.09.001 . Yoshizaki-Gibbons Hailee M . 2018...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2017) 38 (4): 751–761.
Published: 01 December 2017
... interest in bodies is largely the “rubric of younger schol-
ars some of them my own students” (37). Indeed, he is even named in the
acknowledgments of Jonathan Flatley’s Affective Mapping (2008). However,
Jameson’s latest monograph is a testament to the fact that the towering
Marxist critic...
Journal Article
My Leader, Myself? Pictorial Estrangement and Aesopian Language in the Late Work of Kazimir Malevich
Poetics Today (2006) 27 (1): 67–96.
Published: 01 March 2006
...Anna Wexler Katsnelson In the late 1920s, the Russian avant-garde artist Kazimir Malevich embarked on a new direction in art that eighty years later continues to perplex the art historical establishment: the artist formerly known for the radical abstraction of The Black Square returned...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2017) 38 (2): 341–362.
Published: 01 June 2017
... of an engagement with narrative and to recent discussions of the so-called paradox of fiction. To explore in more concrete terms the effect of reading Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship , the article then turns to George Eliot's response in Daniel Deronda (1876). Goethe's novel appeals to the bodies of its...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2019) 40 (3): 597–614.
Published: 01 September 2019
...—spontaneous wandering and controlled return—that can be created in several sensory modalities. Complex enough to characterize Herbert’s poetry as meditative, the pattern of wandering from and returning to a focal image potentially defines a meditative literary mode with a distinctive relationship...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2004) 25 (4): 689–710.
Published: 01 December 2004
...
of the artwork.
2. Blindness and Longing
We live bereft of sight and filled with yearning. Cut off from the vision of
the good that was ours in another world, we seek to return to that world
and that knowledge. In our striving, beauty, and the body’s erotic response
to the sight of beauty, play a central...
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