Results 71 to 80 of about 45,998 (265)
We are the world? Anthropocene cultural production between geopoetics and geopolitics [PDF]
The article argues that the work of literary theorist Mikhail M. Bakhtin presents a starting point for thinking about the instrumentalization of climate change.
Last, Angela
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“Time(‐space) Out of Joint: Franz Kafka's Disrupted Chronotopes”
Abstract This article introduces a new approach to spatial anomalies in Franz Kafka's work by examining them through Mikhail Bakhtin's concept of the literary chronotope, situating it within the broader framework of Bakhtin's earlier ideas on answerability, responsibility, and the ethics of the act.
Asif Rahamim
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Mikhaïl Bakhtin: His Time and Ours
Editorial
Clive Thomson
doaj
Mikhail Mikhailovich Bakhtin (b. 1895–d. 1975) has received much more scholarly attention since his death than he ever did while alive. Bakhtin’s early years found him joining small groups of like-minded intellectuals eager to escape the social and political turmoil of Russia in the late 1910s.
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One of the most fascinating thinkers and literary theorists within the last century is the late Russian form critic Mikhail Bakhtin, whose theory of dialogism seeks to account for several levels of dialectical tension and interplay in great literature ...
Anderson, Paul N.
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Aesthetics of the beautiful: Ideologic tensions in contemporary assessment [PDF]
Pedagogy is an uncertain art. Yet by its very nature, contemporary teaching and learning practice typically suggests that the expert teacher must come to know their student well enough to plan and predict for educational challenges that will expand and ...
White, Elizabeth Jayne
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Problems of Beckett’s Early Poetics
Samuel Beckett’s first novel, Dream of Fair to Middling Women, has been generally defined since its publication in 1992 as Beckett’s conscious departure from the narrative tradition in the West.
José Francisco Fernández
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Women and Intertextuality: On the Example of Margaret Atwood’s The Penelopiad [PDF]
The aim of the study is to consider feminist retellings of myths and legends. As an example, Margaret Atwood’s book The Penelopiad is analyzed. The interpretation is situated in a broader context of intertextual practices characteristic of the feminist
Lisowska, Katarzyna
core
The Peril of Thinking for Others: The Russian Intelligentsia, Pro and Contra
The Russian Review, Volume 85, Issue 1, Page 93-97, January 2026.
Caryl Emerson
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