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Clark Waggoner

Literary Origins: Autonomy in the Kalevala as a means to re-evaluate the tradition of the Western Patriarchy. - 0 views

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    The tradition of oral poetry is shared amongst many ancient cultures, traditions and language families. While there are many similarities, both in the mechanics and the subject matter of these ancient texts, some of the more subtle differences can be extremely enlightening given their significance in understanding the uniqueness of each individual culture and tradition they evolved out of. The Kalevala is a perfect example of how subtle differences in ancient textscan enlighten our understanding of the uniqueness of an ancient culture. This article examines the specific and unique understanding The Kalevala imparts to our Western Tradition.
Rob Peach

Burgh poets 101: Who are Pittsburgh's finest bards? - 0 views

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    Looking for an expert opinion on who constitutes the list of Pittsburgh's best poets, I decided to go to experienced veterans of the Burgh's ever-expanding circle of versesayers, Kris Collins and Scott Silsbe, who manage Caliban Book Shop on South Craig Street by day and satiate their poetic cravings by night, penning their own published (and soon-to-be published work) while running The New Yinzer online literary magazine and hosting poetry readings around town.
Clark Waggoner

Literature You Should Own, But Probably Don't. Part 1: Epic Poetry (Iliad, Odyssey, Aenied, Etc.). - 0 views

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    This is part one in a new series of articles all of which are designed to inform and guide anyone who might want to know a little bit more about the rich tradition of art, letters and philosophy we have inherited from those who came before us. As human beings, our connection to the past is one of the greatest resources we have which imparts perpetual significance to the works discussed in this article, no matter how old they are.
Clark Waggoner

American Literature Classics: Interpreting the Climax of Edgar Allen Poe's Fall of the House of Usher - 0 views

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    In his "The Philosophy of Composition" Poe tells us that he begins writing with "the consideration of an effect" (1598). Almost all of Poe's poetry and fiction give evidence to support Poe's claim that the intended effect, upon the reader, is indeed central to his creative work. This article explores that intended effect and its centrality in Poe's famous short story, "The Fall of the House of Usher".
Clark Waggoner

Evolution in Literature: An Analysis of William Blake's "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell" and the Bible. - 0 views

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    Given the status of the Bible in the western literary tradition as one of the most appropriated and alluded to of all ancient and religious texts, it is not unusual that William Blake writes so extensively about it. While a great body of Blake's mature works, including the longer works "Milton" and "Jerusalem," deal with biblical themes, his early central work, 'The Marriage of Heaven and Hell," gives insight not only into themes that would later occupy Blake's longer works, but also into the unique status of the Bible in western literature
Clark Waggoner

Literary Origins: Virgil's Appropriation of the Homeric Epics - 0 views

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    An examination of the first appropriation in Wester Literature and how it set the tone for the way the rest of us would appropriate. Focuses on Virgl, Homer, and the relationship between the Aeneid and Homer's Epics, the Iliad and the Odyssey. This relationship between these texts is important because it laid the groundwork for how and why other writers in the Western Literary Tradition would also appropriate previous works.
leajohanna

swansea review - 0 views

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    This new online literary magazine is a publication of Swansea University's Postgraduate Creative and Media Writing Programme.  Swansea Review is dedicated to publishing fresh fiction, nonfiction, and poetry--and they are now accepting submissions for the next edition.
leajohanna

Famous Poetry Poets Writers and Authors - 0 views

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    various interpretations by interested people of poems, plays, novels etc. always worth a try
Rob Peach

Open Thread presents tri-state chapbook reading and signing at SPF expo - 0 views

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    Open Thread, the non-profit organization that hosted this past weekend's Small Press Festival (SPF) expo at Carnegie Mellon University's Miller Gallery, held a reading which featured three winners of its first-ever Tri-State Chapbook Contest, in partnership with Encyclopedia Destructica.
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