Results 151 to 160 of about 297,154 (282)

TEKKE EDEBİYATI MI, TÜRK TASAVVUF EDEBİYATI MI?*

open access: yesSakarya Üniversitesi Eğitim Fakültesi Dergisi, 2013
Edebiyatımızın önemli damarlarından olan tasavvufi edebiyatın isimlendirilmesitartışılan konulardandır. İlk başlarda Türk halk edebiyatı kitaplarının bir bölümüolarak değerlendirilen bu tür, daha sonra müstakil kitapların konusu olmayabaşlamakla beraber,
İsmail Güleç
doaj  

Teaching New Religious Movements Historically: Distance, Empathy, and Cults in the Classroom

open access: yesTeaching Theology &Religion, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Resistance to understanding the beliefs of modern New Religious Movements (NRMs) is well‐known to those who teach in the area. This paper builds on Eugene Gallagher's repurposing of “methodological belief” for college classes on NRMs by suggesting that scholars and teachers in the field of religious studies engage methods and content drawn ...
Douglas FitzHenry Jones
wiley   +1 more source

オスカー・ワイルドの初・中期詩における音楽の表象 [PDF]

open access: yes, 2015
Oscar Wilde (1854-1900), an Anglo-Irish author of the nineteenth century, is known to have embraced music both as culture and as an idea. In examining his appreciation of music, musical representations in his earlier poetry should not be overlooked.
中村 仁美
core   +1 more source

Generative AI and the Future of Musical Diversity

open access: yesTopics in Cognitive Science, EarlyView.
Abstract I argue that the current proliferation of generative artificial intelligence (AI) represents a new stage in a longer historical process of distancing humans from their unique individual psyches and of reducing participation and cultural diversity in music. The argument consists of six parts: (1) reiterating the uniqueness of individual psyches,
Dor Shilton
wiley   +1 more source

"Kings and Poets: Self-Irony in Selected Poems by George Seferis and Derek Mahon" [PDF]

open access: yes, 2011
The chapter compares the issue of (self-)irony in the poems of the Irish poet Derek Mahon and the Modern Greek Nobelist poet George Seferis, mainly in Mahon's "Archaeologist" and Seferis's "King of Asine"
Kruczkowska, Joanna
core  

Welcome to the Anthropozine! DIY Booklets as an Alternative to the Peer‐Reviewed Publication

open access: yesAmerican Anthropologist, Volume 128, Issue 2, Page 416-423, June 2026.
ABSTRACT Peer‐reviewed publications remain the most accepted form of knowledge production and distribution in academia today. But such formal publications are often deeply exclusionary, especially for undergraduate and early graduate students as well as scholars tackling highly stigmatized subjects.
Nicholas C. Kawa
wiley   +1 more source

Minor epic: Notes toward a different “Anthropoetry”

open access: yesAnthropology and Humanism, Volume 51, Issue 1, June 2026.
Abstract Anthropologists have often turned to poetry as a means of accessing emotional registers of which conventional academic prose is unable to avail. In doing so, they have tacitly conflated poetry with lyric poetry, today probably the most widely practiced poetic genre, associated in particular with the expression of inner feelings and subjectival
Stuart McLean
wiley   +1 more source

Doctoring Dobbs: Erasure art as anthropological practice

open access: yesAnthropology and Humanism, Volume 51, Issue 1, June 2026.
Abstract This essay examines erasure art as an anthropological practice through Doctoring Dobbs, a multimodal project responding to the US Supreme Court's overturning of federal abortion rights in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization. In creative practice, erasure removes material from an existing source to reveal something new.
Risa Cromer
wiley   +1 more source

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