Browsing by Subject "Lyric poetry"
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Item Restricted Dergiler(1986) Süreya, CemalItem Restricted Form and process in lyric poetry(1964) Askew, Melvin W.Item Open Access Layla grows up: Nizami’s Layla and Majnun “in the Turkish Manner”(Palgrave Macmillan, 2000) Kalpaklı, Mehmet; Andrews, W.; Talattof, K.; Clinton, J. W.Sometime in the last fifteen years of the twelfth century, the Shirvanshah Akhsatan made a request of the poet Nizami: Mīkhāham ke konūn be yād-e majnūn rānī sokhan cho dorr-e maknūn (48)1 I wish you now in Majnun’s recollection to speak poetic words like pearls of perfectionItem Restricted Lirik şiir üstüne birkaç not(1985) Ada, AhmetItem Restricted Lirizmin ufku(1984) Cengizhan, GökhanItem Restricted Lirizmin ufku : Tartışma haber yorum(1984) Cengizhan, GökhanItem Restricted Şeylerin lirizmi(1986) Cengiz, MetinItem Restricted Şiir ve lirizm(1995) Özben, RaifItem Restricted Şiirin patetik yönü(1990) Özben, RaifItem Embargo Spolia-inflected poetics of the old English Andreas(University of North Carolina Press, 2013) Ferhatović, D.Throughout this essay, I focus on the spolium, a fragment charged with meaning that crosses several boundaries, in order to illuminate the poetics of a notoriously idiosyncratic Anglo-Saxon text, the poem now called Andreas. After a short introduction to several literal and metaphorical instances of recycling of objets d'art in the early Middle Ages, on the Continent, and in England, I discuss in detail two episodes in Andreas in which animated artifacts appear as both results of and participants in spoliation—the angel sculpture from a temple set in motion by Jesus and the water-issuing marble column from the Mermedonian dungeon activated by Andrew.Item Open Access A trial reading of Nesati's Taleb gazel(Ottoman and Turkish Studies Association, 1997) Kalpaklı, M.