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circumstantial reading
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Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2016) 115 (3): 469–493.
Published: 01 July 2016
... is an occasional poem, or a poem of circumstance, but where the occasion in question is of a highly paradoxical sort, namely, decolonization. Taking the poem's long period of open composition and revision (1935–56) as the central problem, the essay goes on to sketch a mode of “circumstantial reading” that would...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1967) 66 (1): 31–41.
Published: 01 January 1967
.... One Norse in scription among several found on the famous Dighton Rock in Rhode Island was shown on very close study to read this way to the spring. Concerning all the Eastern Evidence, Godfrey says, In summary, then, the information on the location of Vinland is considerable in quantity, amorphous...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1962) 61 (3): 429–430.
Published: 01 July 1962
... key ideas, and of this he would convince us by very dubious strategies. In his chapter on Blake s Twenty Lost Years, for example, he argues, admittedly on uncertain or most circumstantial evidence, that Blake s intellectual crisis in 1804 (about which we know nearly nothing) had apparently re...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1950) 49 (1): 115–116.
Published: 01 January 1950
... and explanatory notes are excellent. The papers are offered as a documentary history, source material for the historian, but no conclusions are advanced as to the authenticity of the plot. All the evidence is circumstantial. The reports of Pinkerton and his operatives make interesting but not convincing reading...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1961) 60 (1): 116–117.
Published: 01 January 1961
... earnest search, limited to circumstantial evidence, turns out to be inconclusive; and the identity of Whitman s alleged children remains one of the more marginal mysteries of American literature. Nevertheless the book possesses a certain value which is obscured by its sensational thesis. Very briefly...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1955) 54 (1): 56–64.
Published: 01 January 1955
..., 1949, and is supported to some extent by Robert A. Hume in his recent book, Runaway Star, An Appreciation of Henry Adams (1951). While at the present time there is no direct proof, there is no dearth of circumstantial evidence pointing to Adams as the author. In the first place, the Diary is clearly...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1965) 64 (4): 579–581.
Published: 01 October 1965
..., character, and action found in Adams stories and novels is clearly demonstrated in Wilson Hudson s biography of the pioneer Texas novelist. As Professor Hudson shows, the sense of reality that strikes one in reading Adams works is the result of the latter s actual participation in the day-by-day events...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1950) 49 (1): 96–98.
Published: 01 January 1950
.... For the rest he has had the advantage of easy familiarity with family tradition, and he has evidently read very widely indeed in the mass of books about the Laureate. We have now, therefore, an adequate understanding of what we kept hearing about as the Tennysonian black blood and for which hitherto we had...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1967) 66 (1): 87–91.
Published: 01 January 1967
... character of the poetry as he conceives it. This narrowing down enables Sidney, who is a serious man, to commend what might otherwise have to be abandoned. The only way to retrieve or to preserve the poet s credit is to assert that no Philosophers precepts can sooner make you an honest man then the reading...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1944) 43 (2): 174–180.
Published: 01 April 1944
... the Diary will be read mainly for its circumstantial picture of Virginia plantation life in the early years of the eighteenth century and for the self-portrait of Byrd himself, surely one of the most remarkable figures produced by that little area of Tidewater Virginia so rich as a seedbed of American...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1940) 39 (4): 478–484.
Published: 01 October 1940
... an artist. In rejecting him as a professional philosopher, however, he tends to pre clude his having a gentleman s philosophy of life. The Elizabethan gentleman appears to have been unaware that having such a philosophy constituted a flaw. Naturally he adopted a great deal of tradition, and he read...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1904) 3 (2): 175–181.
Published: 01 April 1904
..., and 1737. Besides these it was translated into Dutch, German, Spanish, and English. Mr. Thwaites well declares that it was apparently one of the most widely read books of its day. In 1698 he published still another book on the same subject, Noveau Voyage d un Pais plus grand que 1 Europe...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1917) 16 (4): 369–378.
Published: 01 October 1917
... of personality, and to his agreeable style. Julius W. Pratt. U. S. Naval Academy. English Biography. By Waldo H. Dunn. New York: E. P. Dutton and Company, 1916, xxi, 323 pp. $1.50. A new essay in the history of literature might be read with pleasure and reviewed with praise by even the most aesthetical ly self...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2014) 113 (1): 1–8.
Published: 01 January 2014
... of a “‘circumstantial casu-
istry’ of historically embedded political concepts” rather than a principled
commitment to the separation of church and state. Hunter thus points to
the deep incompatibility within and across three distinct historical concep-
tions of religious liberty: first, Martin Luther’s...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2022) 121 (4): 735–753.
Published: 01 October 2022
... detaches Socratic truth from the traditional reading of it in Platonism, and from the idea that only the transcendent purity of the sky of Ideas truly holds the True, to stage its ruptural value in concrete existence, where flesh-and-blood philosophers are condemned no longer to live precisely because...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1973) 72 (3): 406–414.
Published: 01 July 1973
... as an imperialist and plunderer, but he also devoted considerable attention to warning his Soviet comrades not to read the folly of Pilsudski as an invitation for an exported revo lution. When the several meetings of May 5 ended, Lenin still had not succeeded in reaching any decision on Soviet policy towards...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1990) 89 (1): 27–50.
Published: 01 January 1990
... of 1980, where we read that the essence of the humanities is a spirit or an attitude toward humanity. 4 The 1828 group argued that a core curriculum is essential; so have many since, from John Erskine s great books course at Columbia in 1920 and its descendents at Chicago, Yale, and elsewhere, to recent...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1983) 82 (4): 398–405.
Published: 01 October 1983
... mushrooms, Cleopatra selling onions, and Achilles suffering from ringworm), in the world of Don Juan and Ulysses the Homeric parallels prove at once parodic and true. The characters mythic roles adapt and merge to suit the circumstantial necessities of a complex world; the literary distinctions between...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1937) 36 (4): 478–489.
Published: 01 October 1937
..., Lincoln s Secretary of War, and not John Wilkes Booth, is the enigma in this story. Mr. Eisenschiml s arraignment of Stan ton does everything but convict him of being Booth s accomplice, before and after the fact. Although the evidence is so completely circumstantial that even the author admits it could...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2012) 111 (3): 425–437.
Published: 01 July 2012
... the praemeditatio malorum or exer-
cise of death that forecloses expectations of the future2—the essays in this
collection all imply, with varying degrees of explicitness, that reading and
rereading Foucault always involves pushing on the future rearrangements
of sociality, governmentality, politics, ethics...
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