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Search Results for protest poetry
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Journal Article
Qui Parle (2018) 27 (1): 157–197.
Published: 01 June 2018
... political volition and activism, on the one hand, and a bourgeois conception of subjectivity, consciousness, and will, on the other, emerges as crucial. Copyright © 2018 Editorial Board, Qui Parle 2018 Robert Duncan The H.D. Book Bending the Bow Berkeley free speech movement protest poetry...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2004) 15 (1): 115–145.
Published: 01 June 2004
...Todd Cronan Copyright © 2004 Qui Parle 2004 BIOLOGICAL POETRY: SANTAYANA'S
AESTHETICS
Todd Cronan
How blind is the zeal of iconoclasts! They pour scorn
upon eyes that see not and a mouth that cannot
speak...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2011) 20 (1): 279–299.
Published: 01 June 2011
....20, no.1
artistic practice and of political protest today—wherein dedication
is not unlinked from pessimism, imagination is not unlinked from
reality, love is not unlinked from knowledge.5
Michel de Certeau says that memory “inserts itself into some-
thing...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2013) 21 (2): 127–138.
Published: 01 December 2013
....
We may well argue, as Goethe insisted on doing, that science too
ought to concern itself with that green or that yellow rather than
their numbers; it is, however, indisputable that art and poetry, when
they are enchanted before poppies or cornfl owers, are enchanted...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2016) 24 (2): 137–149.
Published: 01 December 2016
...—products of his letters to Georges Izambard—very quickly
became the tracts of poetic insubordination par excellence for gener-
ations to come: “Poetry will no longer give rhythm to action; it will
be in advance of it.” 2
And Victor Hugo? Petitions, political texts, placards...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2017) 26 (1): 171–194.
Published: 01 June 2017
... awkward—she avoided seeing Jackson Mac Low. Bernadette Mayer and her then-boyfriend, the filmmaker Ed Bowes, were Acker’s closest ties to the poetry scene and the art world, so it’s likely she stayed at their place. On February 18, she and Mel Frielicher read with Ed Bowes and two other friends at a St...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2004) 15 (1): 97–114.
Published: 01 June 2004
... the demands he places on lyrical language.
In the essay "Lyric Poetry and Society," Adorno outlines his
understanding of poetic form and language: The lyric subject turns
its back on society, protests against mere existence, and dreams of
another world. The poem's...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2011) 20 (1): 251–269.
Published: 01 June 2011
...Rei Terada Out of Place
Free Speech, Disruption, and Student Protest
rei terada
In Political Spaces and Global War, Carlo Galli suggests that de-
mand for the “positive ‘freedom of’ speech and criticism” is cre-
ated by the modern state form’s neutralization of domestic political...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2012) 21 (1): 235–261.
Published: 01 June 2012
... they’re too “sing-songy,” too musical, too loud.
So even if poetry constantly proclaims its musicality (lyric, ballad,
sonnet, etc do you think it protests too much? Is poetry a song-
art anymore? (I think Kaja Saariaho is doing interesting work on
260 qui parle fall/winter 2012 vol.21, no.1...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2013) 21 (2): 1–25.
Published: 01 December 2013
... with intimations of
nothingness. In the aftermath of Nietzsche, an inherent loss of faith
gives rise to new valuations, negative and affi rmative, of nihilism
and new fi gurations of belief. Gerard Manley Hopkins’s poetry
vacillates between Pascalian tradition and Nietzschean aftermath.
I want to explore...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2019) 28 (1): 1–75.
Published: 01 June 2019
...Ananda Abeysekara Abstract Critiques of the concept of “Protestant Buddhism” claim to tell a different story about the relation between religion and modernity (“Protestantism”) in South Asia. They seek to reconstruct the temporal relation between the past and the present, contesting postcolonial...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2011) 20 (1): 3–32.
Published: 01 June 2011
...Michelle Ty Introduction
Higher Education on Its Knees
michelle ty
“L’istruzione é in ginocchio” (Education is on its knees), a popular
Italian protest slogan goes.1 To think of the present state of higher
education by attending to the lineaments of this image might of-
fer...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2016) 25 (1-2): 221–232.
Published: 01 December 2016
..., and a set of prac-
tices, modes of employing a received language. The moment of belated
recognition in the Carthage woods signals his attention to, in the fi rst
place, the “style” that emerges in the confrontation of poetry and reli-
gion and exceeds those “ready-made defi nitions...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2017) 26 (2): 249–269.
Published: 01 December 2017
... sigh—signaling different letdowns in the poetry of speechlessness. Elsewhere, famously, “the rest is silence.” . . . When the music lets off, and you’re shifting down to inert being, you sometimes need a jolt—a someone or something to slap it out of you, bringing you back to language, even without...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2001) 12 (2): 143–178.
Published: 01 December 2001
... O'Hara's writing famously blurs the line
between poetry and criticism. Rather than draw out the critical im-
plications of these extreme characterizations of Pollock and de
Kooning, however, art critics have tended to dismiss O'Hara simply
for pushing criticism towards poetry. Here, in its hybrid...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2017) 26 (1): 101–142.
Published: 01 June 2017
... language of force and movement, with terms like “drives” and “slips” to describe what is prior to or beyond the coalescence of a subject or object that might be imitated. This is the sense of poetics as that which “slips” from mimesis or, better, what provokes us to think mimesis—and poetry—as its own form...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2004) 14 (2): 145–175.
Published: 01 December 2004
... and the composer Hanns
Eisler during their Hollywood exile — the issues addressed here
pertain to an array of contiguous problems, more generally con-
cerning the societal parameters of lyric poetry and more specifi-
cally the historical conditions of exile that produce a radical...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2003) 13 (2): 19–51.
Published: 01 December 2003
... in the postwar period,
and this "second wave" of the avant-garde had a deep impact on
contemporary Japan. In the context of the student uprisings and
anti-war protests, or in the bars and night clubs of the Shinjuku and
Shibuya districts of Tokyo, students formed communal theatrical
collectives and new...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2000) 12 (1): 17–54.
Published: 01 June 2000
... Republic.
As is well known, here Plato issues a polemic against poetry, and
representative art in general, and he does so with an argument that
does not so much protest against its negative consequences as against
its origins, by focusing on its ontological underpinnings. That art imi-
tates...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2001) 12 (2): 57–105.
Published: 01 December 2001
... it in a process of reciprocal
recontextualization that accords equal standing to disjunctive and
conjunctive effects alike. If the truth, like poetry, is what is lost in the
translation to conceptuality, then the method I have adopted here -
on the premise that different translations...
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