Results 61 to 70 of about 1,922 (193)

Twentieth-Century Russian Poetry [PDF]

open access: yesTranslation Review, 1993
(1993). Twentieth-Century Russian Poetry. Translation Review: Vol. 42-43, No. 1, pp. 53-55.
openaire   +1 more source

Janet Malcolm's Self‐Portrait

open access: yes
Critical Quarterly, EarlyView.
Jerome Boyd Maunsell
wiley   +1 more source

Utopia Remembers: The Soviet Past in the Imagined Communist Future

open access: yesThe Russian Review, EarlyView.
Abstract After a twenty‐five‐year hiatus, the reappearance of utopian literature in 1957 prompted Soviet literary watchdogs to corral the subgenre into an ideologically‐acceptable mold. A key requirement was for future generations to be depicted as reverently commemorating the past.
Antony Kalashnikov
wiley   +1 more source

‘reportless places’: Janet Malcolm and Collage

open access: yes
Critical Quarterly, EarlyView.
Natalie Ferris
wiley   +1 more source

The Scholar Imprisoned: Young‐Bok Shin's Decolonial Thought Against (Sub) Imperialisms in East Asia

open access: yesSociological Forum, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT This article reads Young‐Bok Shin (1941–2016) as a decolonial thinker who theorized transformative worldmaking from the standpoint of the oppressed, rooted in the historical experiences of East Asia. Against the (sub)imperial “logic of sameness” that structures colonial modernity in his social world, Shin advances gongbu (studying) as a ...
Veda Hyunjin Kim
wiley   +1 more source

SONNETS OF MAKSIM BAHDANOVICH

open access: yesRUDN Journal of Studies in Literature and Journalism, 2015
In article original sonnets of Maxim Bogdanovich - five poems in the Belarusian language and one - in Russian are analyzed. The only Russian sonnet gravitates to a genre kind of “the sonnet about sonnets”.
O I Fedotov, A O Shelemova
doaj  

Delomization, or the esoteric Nechung kang so, the Dalai Lama, and exilic imaginings of a Tibetan community

open access: yesJournal of Linguistic Anthropology, Volume 36, Issue 2, August 2026.
Abstract I propose the concept of delomization, the process whereby a sign comes to be understood as a symbol. I term such signs delomes. With rhematization and dicentization, delomization completes the triplet that linguistic anthropologists derive from Charles Sanders Peirce's third trichotomy.
Urmila Nair
wiley   +1 more source

The Concepts of “Verse”, “Meter” and “Rhythm” in Russian Verse Theory

open access: yesStudia Metrica et Poetica
This article examines definitions of verse and descriptions of the relationships between meter and rhythm as proposed by scholars of Russian poetry. Building on their observations, the author devises a constructive definition of “meter” as a system of ...
Igor Pilshchikov
doaj   +1 more source

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