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This collection showcases the bold, heartfelt work of the 2024 graduates from both the MA in Literary Translation and MA in Poetry at UEA.
The poet crafts a heartfelt memoir dedicated to her brother and nephew, who tragically lost their lives in the Oceangate expedition. Each verse captures raw emotion and profound loss, reflecting on the fragility of life and the enduring power of love. This compilation offers a deeply personal journey through sorrow and healing, inviting readers to share in the poet's intimate reflections and undying hope.
Carefully considering the difference in the philosophical potential of page poetry and performance poetry, Karen Simecek argues that it is only by considering them side by side that the unique cognitive value of each can be realised. Focusing on spoken word poetry reveals the importance of voice and embodied words to the differing epistemic rewards of engaging with contemporary works of poetry in both private reading and live performance. This concept of embodied voice progresses a new line of thinking in the cognitivism debate and unlocks the philosophical value of engaging with poetry. Simecek's discussion of performed poetry also advances discussions of affect and experience in contemporary analytic aesthetics which raise new insights and connections within the field. The moral significance of the differing effects of poetry finds comprehensive articulation through a rich philosophical analysis of the thoughts and affects which arise in particular contexts. Simecek concludes that when page poetry is treated as paradigmatic, this enables reflection in the singular, whereas taking poetry in live performance as paradigmatic enables reflection on what is shared and shareable with others.
King Alfred's West-Saxon Version of Gregory's Pastoral Care (1871) is a key Anglo-Saxon text. Preserved in two manuscripts written during Alfred's lifetime, it affords data of the highest value for fixing the grammatical peculiarities of the West-Saxon dialect of the ninth century.
Foregrounds underrepresented agents (women, nature and the nonhuman) in and through the poetry of Theocritus.
The Epic of Cader Idris straddles the colloquial and the humorous, the philosophical and the mundane in language so lyrical that you could almost miss its politics in its own music, humming with the quirks one who knows the immigrant experience of modern Britain as intimately as the cliffs and dales of his youth.
In this sixth collection, Terry Wilson writes about a fish that became an elephant and how this is better than becoming a human. We all want to be elephants someday. This is poetry about the holes in life rather than the whole of life, and what we see through them.
Come sail with me aboard The Art of the Sigh and experience strong emotional seas, everchanging societal winds and the sanctuary of the shore. Your heart will be touched, your mind will be stimulated and your soul will be replenished. Some of the pieces send an overt message while others are less blatant. All are structured to pique your interest and engage your brain, your heart and inspire. Many of the pieces are based on real, easily recognizable events, to which we all can relate. Some of the pieces are reflections of circumstances in my personal life. Many readers will recognize themselves in these compositions. You will undergo personal enlightenment, as well as many moments of self-examination, empathy, sympathy, and compassion. In the interest of full disclosure, you may be brought to tears, laugh out loud, feel deep sadness, or profound anger. The voyage is a rollercoaster journey packed with thought-provoking scenarios mirroring real life events and episodes effecting life in the 21st century and the overwhelming challenges that face us all.
Meet Us and Eat Us: Food plants from around the world celebrates biodiversity through poetry, prose, and fine art photography. Giving plants voice and agency, it introduces their family relationships, geographical origin, history of use and travel, and cultural significance in a playful and scientifically rigorous exploration.
In Poetry & Rhyme, Gray Edgewood invites readers into a world painted with the nuances of everyday life and the quiet beauty of nature. Living in the coastal town of Scarborough, Edgewood's poetry captures the essence of his surroundings, from the simple joys of watching wild birds to the unexpected encounters that colour our lives. Each poem is a window into the poet's observations and reflections, offering a gentle, contemplative perspective on the mundane and the extraordinary alike.
Affrilachian Poet Bernard Clay narrates his West-Side Louisville upbringing and the complexities of Black Appalachian identity in this debut collection of poems compiled from more than twenty years of work.
The Iliad and the Odyssey are the cornerstones of Western literature, inspiring artists, writers, philosophers, musicians, playwrights, and film-makers throughout history. Barbara Graziosi introduces Homer's key works and discusses the main literary, historical, and archaeological issues at the heart of Homeric studies.
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