Results for 'Religious poetry, Marathi'

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  1.  45
    The Religious Poetry of Christina Rossetti.Jerome J. McGann - 1983 - Critical Inquiry 10 (1):127-144.
    I want to argue…that to read Rossetti’s religious poetry with understanding requires a more or less conscious investment in the peculiarities of its Christian orientation, in the social and historical particulars which feed and shape the distinctive features of her work. Because John O. Waller’s relatively recent essay on Rossetti, “Christ’s Second Coming: Christina Rossetti and the Premillenarianist William Dodsworth,” focuses on some of the most important of these particulars, it seems to me one of the most useful pieces (...)
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  2.  14
    Rigveda: The Earliest Religious Poetry of India. Translated by Stephanie W. Jamison and Joel P. Brereton.Elizabeth Tucker - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 136 (1).
    The Rigveda: The Earliest Religious Poetry of India. Translated by Stephanie W. Jamison and Joel P. Brereton. South Asia Research. New York. Oxford University Press, 2014. 3 vols. Pp. 1693. $420.
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  3.  34
    English and Hindi Religious Poetry, an Analogical Study.P. Gaeffke & John A. Ramsaran - 1975 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 95 (2):338.
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  4.  83
    Late Antique Religious Poetry - J. Den Boeft, A. Hilhorst: Early Christian Poetry: a Collection of Essays. (Supplements to Vigiliae Christianae, 22: Texts and Studies of Early Christian Life and Language). Pp. xii+320. Leiden, New York, Cologne: E. J. Brill, 1993. Cased, Gld. 180/$103. [REVIEW]J. Bryce - 1996 - The Classical Review 46 (1):40-42.
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  5.  32
    Poetry and revelation: for a phenomenology of religious poetry.Felix Ó Murchadha - 2021 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 90 (1):85-89.
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  6. Awakening and its imagery in Tagore's early religious poetry.Victor A. van Bijlert - 1997 - In Frits Staal & Dick van der Meij (eds.), India and beyond: aspects of literature, meaning, ritual and thought: essays in honour of Frits Staal. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 14.
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  7. La'Paraphasis in TRiginta psalmos versibus scripta'by Marcantino Flaminio: An example of religious poetry in the 16th century.M. Bottai - 2000 - Rinascimento 40:157-265.
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  8. 4. Reversion and the Turning Hither: Writing Religious Poetry and the Case of Frank Samperi.Peter O'leary - 2004 - Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 7 (2).
     
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  9.  37
    “Help thou mine unbelief”: Perception in Denise Levertov’s Religious Poetry.Cristina María Gámez Fernández - 2007 - Renascence 60 (1):53-74.
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  10.  51
    Early Zoroastrianism Early Zoroastrianism. By James Hope Moulton. Hibbert Lectures for 1912. Williams and Norgate. 10s. 6d. net. Early Religious Poetry of Persia. By J. H. Moulton. Cambridge: University Press. [REVIEW]W. H. D. Rouse - 1916 - The Classical Review 30 (5-6):163-165.
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  11.  64
    Lyric Poetry as Religious Language.Louis Z. Hammer - 1963 - The Monist 47 (3):401-416.
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  12.  62
    John A. Ramsaran: English And Hindi Religious Poetry. An Analogical Study. (Studies In The History Of Religions-Supplements to Numen XXIII). E. J. Brill, Leiden 1973, 199 pp. [REVIEW]Udo Tworuschka - 1974 - Zeitschrift für Religions- Und Geistesgeschichte 26 (3):270-273.
  13. Religious language as poetry: Heidegger's challenge.Anna Strhan - 2011 - Heythrop Journal 52 (6):926-938.
    This paper examines how Heidegger's view that language is poetry might provide a helpful way of understanding the nature of religious language. Poetry, according to Heidegger, is language in its purest form, in that it both reveals Being, whilst also showing the difference between word and thing. In poetry, Heidegger suggests, we come closest to the essence of language itself and encounter its strangeness and impermeability, and its revelatory character. What would be the implications for viewing religious language (...)
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  14. Religious Trends in English Poetry, Volume IV: 1830–1880.Hoxie Neale Fairchild - 1957
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  15. Wordsworth and Ultimate Reality: Poetry and Religious Practice.John L. Mahoney - 2007 - In B. K. Dalai (ed.), Ultimate reality and meaning. Pune: Centre of Advanced Study in Sanskrit, University of Pune. pp. 30--4.
     
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  16.  11
    The Use of the Arts of Adaptation and Allusion in Arabic Poetry from West Africa and It Is Reading In the Context of Religious Intertextuality.Mohamadou Aboubacar MAİGA - 2022 - Fırat Üniversitesi İlahiyat Fakültesi Dergisi 27 (1):53-78.
    It is known that the text of the Qur'an is artistic prose that has reached an unprecedented level in terms of its unique style, superiority, and robustness. Likewise, it can be said for hadith texts reach the peak of eloquence and beauty. Scholars have paid attention to the Qur'an and Hadith texts for centuries in their scientific studies. There are also poets among those who care. Inspired by both texts, they tried to use their style in their odes and literary (...)
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  17.  55
    Contemporary Poetry, Alternate Routes.Jerome J. McGann - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 13 (3):624-647.
    What is the significance of that loose collective enterprise, sprung up in the aftermath of the sixties, known as L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E Writing? To answer this question I will be taking, initially, a somewhat oblique route. And I shall assume an agreement on several important social and political matters: first, that the United States, following the Second World War, assumed definitive leadership of a capitalist empire; second, that its position of leadership generated a network of internal social contradictions which persist to this (...)
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  18.  8
    Interpretation: The Poetry of Meaning : [philosophical, Religious, and Literary Inquiries Into the Expression of Human Experience Through Language].Stanley Romaine Consultation on Hermeneutics, David L. Hopper & Miller - 1967 - Harcourt, Brace & World.
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  19. Review of Poetry and the Religious Imagination: The Power of the Word. [REVIEW]Subhasis Chattopadhyay - 2020 - Prabuddha Bharata or Awakened India 125 (7):571-2.
    This review shows how during COVID 19, poetry and theology both can soothe us. The collection of essays in this anthology is wide ranging engaging with Dante; right up to Wallace Stevens and Denise Levertov. The reviewer thanks the Ramakrishna Mission for providing him with a hard copy of this book. In passing; in the spirit of IndianLivesMatter, one notes that Prabuddha Bharata has never missed an issue from 1896 till date. In his long stint as reviewer for the Ramakrishna (...)
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  20.  5
    R.S. Thomas: Poet of the Hidden God: Meaning and Mediation in the Poetry of R.S. Thomas.D. Z. Phillips - 1986 - Wipf and Stock Publishers.
    This book is one philosopher's response to the poetry of R. S. Thomas. It examines the poet's struggle with the possibilities of sense in religion: R. S. Thomas has described his poetry as an obsession with the possibility of having 'conversations or linguistic confrontations with ultimate reality'. Some attempts at giving meaning to religious belief cannot withstand the assaults of criticism. In R. S. Thomas's verse, however, there emerges a hard-won celebration of the worship of a hidden God; a (...)
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  21.  66
    Greek Poetry 2000–700 B.C.M. L. West - 1973 - Classical Quarterly 23 (02):179-.
    They used to believe that mankind began in 4004 B.C. and the Greeks in 776. We now know that these last five thousand years during which man has left written record of himself are but a minute fraction of the time he has spent developing his culture. We now understand that the evolution of human society, its laws and customs, its economics, its religious practices, its games, its languages, is a very slow process, to be measured in millennia. In (...)
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  22.  7
    On poetry and philosophy: thinking metaphorically with Wordsworth and Kant.Brayton Polka - 2021 - Euegen, Oregon: Pickwick Publications.
    Brayton Polka’s book, On Poetry and Philosophy: Thinking Metaphorically with Wordsworth and Kant, is unique in bringing poetry and philosophy together in a single study. The poet and the philosopher whom he makes central to his project are both revolutionary founders of modernity, Wordsworth of romantic poetry and Kant of critical philosophy. Both the poet and the philosopher, as the author makes clear in his study, found their principles, at once poetically metaphorical and philosophically critical, on the religious values (...)
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  23.  23
    Poetry, Religion and Theology:The Poetry of MeditationSpiritual Problems in Contemporary LiteraturePoetry and Dogma.John E. Smith - 1955 - Review of Metaphysics 9 (2):252 - 273.
    The three books we are to consider, although each has its own integrity and individual theme, are bound together by their common concern for poetry and religion, theology and philosophy. Martz and Ross are interested chiefly in the relations between poetry and theology, while the essays edited by Hopper concentrate more upon the aims and beliefs of the artist in his cultural setting and especially upon those features of the contemporary world which raise problems of a religious character. No (...)
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  24. The Poetry of Nachoem M. Wijnberg.Vincent W. J. Van Gerven Oei - 2011 - Continent 1 (2):129-135.
    continent. 1.2 (2011): 129-135. Introduction Vincent W.J. van Gerven Oei Successions of words are so agreeable. It is about this. —Gertrude Stein Nachoem Wijnberg (1961) is a Dutch poet and novelist. He also a professor of cultural entrepreneurship and management at the Business School of the University of Amsterdam. Since 1989, he has published thirteen volumes of poetry and four novels, which, in my opinion mark a high point in Dutch contemporary literature. His novels even more than his poetry are (...)
     
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  25.  20
    Review of Poetry and the Religious imagination: the Power of the Word, edited by Francesca Bugliani Knox and David Lonsdale: Farnham: Ashgate Publishing Ltd., 2015, ISBN 978-1-4724-2626-0, 280pp. [REVIEW]Daniel John Pilkington - 2015 - Sophia 54 (3):399-401.
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  26.  56
    Demonstrating the Therapeutic Values of Poetry in Doctoral Research: Autoethnographic Steps from the Enchanted Forest to a PhD by Publication Path.Suleman Lazarus - 2021 - Methodological Innovations 14 (2):1-11.
    We rarely acknowledge the achievements of doctoral candidates who fought with all they had but still lost the battle and dropped out – we know so little about what becomes of them. This reflective article is about the betrayals of PhD supervisors in one institution, the trauma and stigma of withdrawing from that institution, writing poetry as a coping mechanism and the triumph in completing a Thesis by Publication (TBP) in another institution. Thus, I build on Lesley Saunders’s idea about (...)
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  27. The Claim of the Word and the Religious Significance of Poetry: A Humanistic Problem.Ernesto Grassi - 1984 - Dionysius 8:131-154.
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  28. Presenting This Issue-Wordsworth and Ultimate Reality: Poetry and Religious Practice.John L. Mahoney - 2007 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 30 (4):259.
     
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  29. Hoxie Neale Fairchild, Religious Trends in English Poetry. Vol. III: 1780-1830. [REVIEW]M. Martin - 1950 - The Thomist 13:108.
     
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  30.  36
    Postsecularity and the Poetry of T.S. Eliot, Stevie Smith, and Carol Ann Duffy.Jane Dowson - 2021 - Sophia 60 (3):735-745.
    This article responds to philosophers and literary critics who espouse concepts about an endemic postsecularity in western nations that encroach across the globe. Postsecularity accounts for the resurgence of a religious consciousness in the face of challenges to secularity in the forms of accommodating minority religions; the yearning for spiritual expression as an antidote to capitalist materialism; and posthuman concerns about the engineering of biological human identities, artificial intelligence, and anthropogenic climate crises. Poetry, with its non-verbal cues, can both (...)
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  31.  19
    Poetry and Apocalypse: Theological Disclosures of Poetic Language.William Franke - 2008 - Stanford University Press.
    In _Poetry and Apocalypse_, Franke seeks to find the premises for dialogue between cultures, especially religious fundamentalisms—including Islamic fundamentalism—and modern Western secularism. He argues that in order to be genuinely open, dialogue needs to accept possibilities such as religious apocalypse in ways that can be best understood through the experience of poetry. Franke reads Christian epic and prophetic tradition as a secularization of religious revelation that preserves an understanding of the essentially apocalyptic character of truth and its (...)
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  32.  82
    The Poetry of Gregory Nazianzus.Herbert Musurillo - 1970 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 45 (1):45-55.
    In his poetry, Gregory is the theologian at prayer, revealing a dark vision of himself as well as the ineffable Light to which he was unceasingly drawn.
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  33. Poetry and Ethics: Inventing Possibilities in Which We Are Moved to Action and How We Live Together.Obiora Ike, Andrea Grieder & Ignace Haaz (eds.) - 2018 - Geneva, Switzerland: Globethics Publications.
    This book on the topic of ethics and poetry consists of contributions from different continents on the subject of applied ethics related to poetry. It should gather a favourable reception from philosophers, ethicists, theologians and anthropologists from Africa, Asia, Europe and Latin America and allows for a comparison of the healing power of words from various religious, spiritual and philosophical traditions. The first part of this book presents original poems that express ethical emotions and aphorism related to a philosophical (...)
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  34.  20
    Some Mannerist Ingenuities in Mystic Poetry.Reuven Tsur - 2004 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 11 (5-6):5-6.
    One of the central assumptions of the present study is that mystic or religious poetry not just formulates mystic or religious ideas: it somehow converts theological ideas into religious experience, by verbal means. It somehow seems to reach the less rational layers of the mind by some drastic interference with the smooth functioning of the cognitive system, or by a quite smooth regression from ‘ordinary consciousness’ to some ‘altered state of consciousness’. In this way, the experience is (...)
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  35.  49
    Poetry and Prayer.Nathan A. Scott Jr - 1966 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 41 (1):61-80.
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  36.  22
    Interpretations of Poetry and Religion.William G. Holzberger & Herman J. Saatkamp (eds.) - 1990 - MIT Press.
    Interpretations of Poetry and Religion is the third volume in a new critical edition of the complete works of George Santayana that restores Santayana's original text and provides important new scholarly information.Published in the spring of 1900, Interpretations of Poetry and Religion was George Santayana's first book of critical prose. It developed his view that "poetry is called religion when it intervenes in life, and religion, when it merely supervenes upon life, is seen to be nothing but poetry." This statement (...)
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  37.  47
    Interpretations of Poetry and Religion.George Santayana & Joel Porte - 1900 - MIT Press.
    Interpretations of Poetry and Religion is the third volume in a new critical editionof the complete works of George Santayana that restores Santayana's original text and providesimportant new scholarly information.Published in the spring of 1900, Interpretations of Poetry andReligion was George Santayana's first book of critical prose. It developed his view that "poetry iscalled religion when it intervenes in life, and religion, when it merely supervenes upon life, isseen to be nothing but poetry." This statement and the point of view (...)
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  38.  31
    Bibliography of John Dewey. By M. H. Thomas, Columbia University Press, New York. 246 pages, $3. - The Origin of Submarine Canyons. By D. Johnson, Columbia University Press, New York. 126 pages, $2.50. - Nature in the German Novel of the Late Eighteenth Century. By C. L. Hornaday, Columbia University Press, New York. 221 pages, $2.25. - Philosophy in the Poetry of Edwin Arlington Robinson. By Estelle Kaplan. Columbia University Press. 162 pages, $2.25. - The March of Medicine. Edited by the Committee on Lectures to the Laity of the N. Y. Academy of Medicine. Columbia University Press, New York. 168 pages, $2.00. - The 1938 Mental Measurements Yearbook. By O. K. Buros, Rutgers University Press. 415 pages $3. - Psychology and the Cosmic Order, 185 pages; Logic and the Cosmic Order, 92 pages; God and the Cosmic Order, 157 pages. Three books by Louis F. Anderson, Society for the Elucidation of Religious Principles, New York. - Cosmo-Retardation. By I. Ziporyn, Dexter Publishing Co., Detroi. [REVIEW]M. M. W. - 1940 - Philosophy of Science 7 (3):387-388.
  39.  17
    Poetry and the Play of the Goddess: Theology in Jayaratha’s Alaṃkāravimarśinī.James D. Reich - 2020 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 48 (4):665-674.
    The beginning of Jayaratha’s commentary on Ruyyaka’s Alaṃkārasarvasva contains a long digression on the nature of the goddess Parā Vāc, “Highest Speech,” referred to in Ruyyaka’s benedictory verse. This is an unusual choice in a text on poetics, and attention to Jayaratha’s religious context reveals that the digression is based closely on Abhinavagupta’s Parātrīśikāvivaraṇa, a tantric commentary. Jayaratha models his opening passage on this text in order to bolster an argument he wants to make about poetry, namely that poetry (...)
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  40.  23
    Can Nāstikas Taste Āstika Poetry? Tagore’s Poetry and the Critique of Secularity.Sudipta Kaviraj - 2021 - Sophia 60 (3):677-697.
    This paper asks the following question: can an atheist reader fully taste the aesthetic meaning of poetry written by a theist author? This question is discussed with specific reference to the devotional poetry of Tagore. The paper discusses forms of pre-modern religious thinking which influenced Tagore’s conceptions of God, his relation to Nature, human society, and the human self. But it stresses that Tagore’s time was different from those of pre-modern believers. Tagore, as a modern thinker, had to fashion (...)
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  41. Poetry.Anna Christina Ribeiro - 2009 - In Stephen Davies, Kathleen J. Higgins, Robert Hopkins, Robert Stecker & David Cooper (eds.), Blackwell Companion to Aesthetics. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 101-104.
    One of the most ancient art forms, poetry, like other art forms, finds its roots embedded in activities that are not necessarily associated with art today, most notably religious rituals. Still, even while poetry is now commonly enjoyed for its own sake, many poems continue to be made for specific life events: weddings, funerals, presidential swearing-in ceremonies, anniversaries, and so on. Their connection to such events may call into question the art status of some poems; indeed, definitions of poetry (...)
     
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  42.  79
    The Poetry of Rabindranath Tagore II.Jerome D’Souza - 1935 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 10 (1):30-48.
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  43.  55
    Italian Poetry Since the War.Julia Cooley Altrocchi - 1933 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 8 (2):286-304.
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  44.  33
    Poetry and Anarchy.David Jones - 1997 - The Chesterton Review 23 (1/2):89-91.
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  45.  40
    Great Poetry of the Spirit.John Wren-Lewis - 1994 - The Chesterton Review 20 (4):542-546.
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  46.  56
    The Poetry of Giovanni Boccaccio.Joseph Tusiani - 1975 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 50 (4):339-350.
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  47.  29
    The Implied Imperative: Poetry as Ethics in the Proverbs of the Tirukkuṟaḷ.Jason W. Smith - 2022 - Journal of Religious Ethics 50 (1):123-145.
    Journal of Religious Ethics, Volume 50, Issue 1, Page 123-145, March 2022.
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  48.  17
    Send My Roots Rain: A Study of Religious Experience in the Poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins.Donald Walhout - 1982 - Religious Studies 18 (4):546-547.
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  49.  80
    The Poetry of Marianne Moore.Sister Mary Cecilia - 1963 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 38 (3):354-374.
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  50.  5
    Hölderlin's Dionysiac Poetry: The Terrifying-Exciting Mysteries.Lucas Murrey - 2015 - Cham: Imprint: Springer.
    This book casts new light on the work of the German poet Friedrich Hölderlin (1770 - 1843), and his translations of Greek tragedy. It shows Hölderlin's poetry is unique within Western literature (and art) as it retrieves the socio-politics of a Dionysiac space-time and language to challenge the estrangement of humans from nature and one other. In this book, author Lucas Murrey presents a new picture of ancient Greece, noting that money emerged and rapidly developed there in the sixth century (...)
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