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Showing 166 to 180 of 703 results Save | Export
Leal, Amy – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Two months before he died, John Keats claimed he had been poisoned. Although most scholars and biographers have attributed Keats's fears of persecution, betrayal, and murder to consumptive dementia, Keats's suspicions had begun long before 1820 and were not without some justification. In this article, the author talks about the death of John…
Descriptors: Poetry, Poets, Poisoning, Death
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Smith, Richard – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2008
There is a longstanding difficulty in distinguishing philosophy (and philosophy of education) from other kinds of writing. Even the notions of clarity and rigour, sometimes claimed as central and defining characteristics of philosophy at its best, turn out to have ineliminably figurative elements, and accounts of philosophical method often display…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Educational Philosophy, Poets, Historians
Zabitgil, Ozlem – ProQuest LLC, 2010
The purpose of the study was to reach a close understanding of villagers' experience of change in the changing context of the Turkish Republic. The poetry books of two renowned literary figures Mehmet Basaran and Talip Apaydin were studied to investigate villagers' reactions and responses to various national changes. The literary work of these…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literacy Education, Rural Schools, Social Change
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Tace Hedrick – Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 2009
Despite their differences in place and time, the woman-centered Chilean poet Gabriela Mistral and the Chicana lesbian feminist writer Gloria Anzaldua both looked to a transnational intellectual American history that frequently connected discourses of esotericism, indigenismo, and mestizaje. My comparative approach shows how both women used these…
Descriptors: United States History, Feminism, Race, Homosexuality
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Jocson, Korina M. – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2009
This article builds upon more than 6 years of critical research in urban schools in northern California to offer a particular perspective on teaching for social justice. Concerned with prevailing issues in adolescent literacy, this article examines instantiations of literacy instruction in the shadow of the late activist poet June Jordan and with…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Urban Schools, Adolescents, Literacy Education
Michael, Ann E. – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2008
Walt Whitman defies ontology: he strives to be eternal, to journey ever in the now, and thus to forswear beginnings. And there is a great deal of "place" in Whitman, space both concrete and metaphorical, Alabama and Maine, body and "kosmos." But Whitman the man was born in Huntington, Long Island, which is a good a place to start exploring how…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Poets, Poetry, Literary Criticism
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Sutton-Spence, Rachel; Kaneko, Michiko – Sign Language Studies, 2007
This paper considers the range of ways that sign languages use geometric symmetry temporally and spatially to create poetic effect. Poets use this symmetry in sign language art to highlight duality and thematic contrast, and to create symbolic representations of beauty, order and harmony. (Contains 8 tables, 14 figures and 6 notes.)
Descriptors: Poetry, Geometric Concepts, Sign Language, Poets
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O'Brien, Tom – Arts Education Policy Review, 2007
In this essay, the author asks, "What can the romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley teach us about arts education today?" In Shelley's time, no one was yet worried about improving math, reading, or SAT scores. Nevertheless, there was an implication in the rise of the sciences that educators were even then beginning to confront: What, some…
Descriptors: Art Education, Advocacy, Poets, Prose
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Heard, Georgia – Voices from the Middle, 2009
Georgia Heard spent a week with students in New Mexico, encouraging their search for "self-portrait poetry"--poetry in which they saw themselves. She witnessed courage, pain, tragedy, and hope in the choices and writing of those struggling students, and came to learn that at least one among them had found a life-changing outlet.…
Descriptors: Pain, Poetry, Self Disclosure (Individuals), At Risk Students
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Whitley, David – Children's Literature in Education, 2007
Carol Ann Duffy's three volumes of children's poetry are important and interesting because they emerge from the work of a writer whose adult poetry has persistently associated childhood with dark and difficult areas of experience. This article explores what happens to such challenging material when a poet of major significance changes the focus of…
Descriptors: Poetry, Poets, Children, Childrens Literature
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Anderson, Neil – English in Australia, 2007
In order to better understand the worth of aesthetic experience in encountering poetry, fresh perspectives are helpful. This paper introduces the reader to modern stylistics: that is linguistic examinations of "the speaker's meaning" in literature and notes such "scientific" approaches to poetry do find common metaphysical ground with leading…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Poetry, Aesthetics, Metacognition
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Abbott, Ruth – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2007
This article begins by noting the tendency of certain academic practices to arrest thought, and attempts to circumvent that arrestation in the writer by reflecting on her adolescent response to the writings of William Wordsworth. It explores the possible implications of a youthful feeling that poetry is "true", tying this in with Wordsworth's own…
Descriptors: Poetry, Reader Response, Personal Narratives, English Literature
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Saunders, Lesley – Educational Action Research, 2007
This paper is written in a personal capacity and mainly takes the form of a poem--in five sections--composed as a response to some of the ideas in the article by Hannu Heikkinen and colleagues in this same issue of "Educational Action Research": "Action research as narrative: five principles for validation". The poem takes its…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Action Research, Poets, Poetry
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Esmail, Jennifer – Sign Language Studies, 2008
This article argues that poetry written by nineteenth-century British and American deaf poets played an important role in the period's sign language debates. By placing the publication of this poetry in the context of public exhibitions of deaf students, I suggest that the poetry was mobilized to publicly defend the linguistic and intellectual…
Descriptors: Sign Language, Deafness, Poets, Poetry
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Michener, Roger – Library Quarterly, 1973
The little-known aspects of the poet's life and career as librarian and professor are explored. The article discusses his practices in book buying, his interests in languages and literatures, and his predilection for books. (27 references) (Author/SJ)
Descriptors: History, Librarians, Poets
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