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Wyświetlanie 1-5 z 5
Tytuł:
Heterotopic Yeats: A Foucauldian Study of the Heterotopic Qualities Found in Some Poems by W. B. Yeats
Autorzy:
Ghahremani, Hamid
Shabanirad, Ensieh
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1190124.pdf
Data publikacji:
2016
Wydawca:
Przedsiębiorstwo Wydawnictw Naukowych Darwin / Scientific Publishing House DARWIN
Tematy:
Michel Foucault
heterotopia
production of knowledge
W. B. Yeats
The Tower
Opis:
Michel Foucault is certainly one of the greatest minds of the 20th century whose ever-growing influence may be traced in nearly every field of humanities such as economy, history, and of course, literary theory and criticism. The concept of heterotopia is arguably among the most intriguing concepts developed through the works of Foucault. Simply stated, a heterotopia is a space whose function is to disturb the established order of an existing space, and, as a result, lead to the production of knowledge. However, heterotopias found in Foucault’s own works are usually functioning in linguistic, or textual, terms rather than referring to a real, physical space. The purpose of the present essay is to provide its readers with the analyses of some of the poems of the Noble-winning Irish poet, dramatist, and prose writer W. B. Yeats in terms of their heterotopic qualities, and to show that physical heterotopias can also lead to the production of knowledge
Źródło:
World Scientific News; 2016, 35; 123-133
2392-2192
Pojawia się w:
World Scientific News
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Technology of Power in Philip K. Dick’s Do Android Dream of Electric Sheep?
Autorzy:
Mirmobin, Sara
Shabanirad, Ensieh
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1178365.pdf
Data publikacji:
2017
Wydawca:
Przedsiębiorstwo Wydawnictw Naukowych Darwin / Scientific Publishing House DARWIN
Tematy:
Do Androids Dream
Jean Baudrillard
Michel Foucault
Simulation
Thomas Mathiesen
hyperreality
panopticism
surveillance
synopticism
technology of power
Opis:
The science fiction of Philip Kindred Dick is a manifestation of the unprecedented challenges of man in modern times. This essay is a sociological study of Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric sheep? based on Michel Foucault’s concepts as well as Jean Baudrillard, and Thomas Mathiesen’s theories about power and its techniques. The library research method is used to trace some elements of the technology of power and the sociopolitical issues in multiple layers of the novel which reflects implicitly the nineteen sixties’ mood. The high-tech society of it is watched, controlled and conducted through advanced devices, media, consumerism, and pseudo- religion doctrine. The Foucauldian surveillance and panopticism are discussed in this carceral society where the minds of the individuals are routinely inspected in search for deviancy; and where their moods are regulated and their feeling are shared voluntarily. In addition to panopticism, due to the important role of the media in the novel, Mathiesen’s synopticism is discussed. The man’s efforts for compensating what he had destroyed i.e. the devastated nature result in Baudrillard’s concepts of hyperreality and simulation that blur the line between real and unreal. Do Androids Dream illuminates the revolutionary mood of nineteen sixties, the uprising of the youth and marginal groups against the prevalent beliefs and values. It also reflects the anxieties of atomic age, cold war paranoia, and McCarthyism. In the novel, the individuals are ubiquitously surveilled and mercilessly conducted; the truth does not have an existence of its own, and it’s just part of the regime.
Źródło:
World Scientific News; 2017, 77, 2; 226-241
2392-2192
Pojawia się w:
World Scientific News
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Passage of Time and Loss of Childhood in Dylan Thomas’s Fern Hill and William Wordsworth’s Ode: Intimations of Immortality
Autorzy:
Shabanirad, Ensieh
Omrani, Elham
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1191976.pdf
Data publikacji:
2016
Wydawca:
Przedsiębiorstwo Wydawnictw Naukowych Darwin / Scientific Publishing House DARWIN
Tematy:
Dylan Thomas
Fern Hill
Loss of Childhood
Ode: Intimations of Immortality
Passage of Time
Wordsworth
Opis:
Dylan Thomas (1914-1953) is one of the greatest twentieth century poets, who composed poetry in English. His passionate emotions and his personal, lyrical writing style make him be alike the Romantic poets than the poets of his era. Much of Thomas’s works were influenced by his early experiences and contacts with the natural world, especially his famous poem, Fern Hill. This paper aims to compare Thomas’s Fern Hill with Wordsworth’s Ode: Intimations of Immortality to illustrate the poets’ different attitudes towards time and childhood. In Fern Hill, Thomas’s attitude towards childhood changes from one of happiness and satisfaction to grief and loss of innocence and carefreeness. Thomas believes that Time seems like a hero to a child and allows him to be innocent and carefree; but as the child grows older and loses his childhood, he considers Time as a villain who imprisons him and does not let him enjoy life anymore and robes his childhood’s blessings and treasures. Conversely, Wordsworth in his Ode: Intimations of Immortality expressed his belief that although Time has taken his childhood creativity and imagination, but matured his thought and reason and given him insight and experience in exchange. Therefore, although Thomas and Wordsworth are both mournful at the loss of the childhood and its blessings, Wordsworth appreciates the adulthood insight, knowledge, experience, and philosophical mind. So, apparently Wordsworth’s poem is more inspiring and hopeful than Thomas’s in which he accepted being aged regretfully of his childhood, while Wordsworth’s poem enlightens the readers on how to feel happy and grateful of the rewards of adulthood.
Źródło:
World Scientific News; 2016, 50; 106-116
2392-2192
Pojawia się w:
World Scientific News
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
An Obsession with Time in Selected Works of T. S. Eliot as a Major Modernist
Autorzy:
Shabanirad, Ensieh
Ahangar, Ronak Ahmady
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1189978.pdf
Data publikacji:
2016
Wydawca:
Przedsiębiorstwo Wydawnictw Naukowych Darwin / Scientific Publishing House DARWIN
Tematy:
T. S. Eliot
Concept of Time
Intertextuality
Modernist Poetry
Opis:
As a poet, Eliot seems obsessed with time: the speaker of "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" keeps worrying about being late, and the passage of time in general as he gets older seems to continuously haunt him. In "The Waste Land" we have another form of obsession that presents itself in form of intertexuality; the many narrators of the poem go back and forth in time and provide almost random recollections of the past or haphazard bits of literary texts that are equally concerned with time. This article aims to look deeper into the importance of the concept time in Eliot's poetry, the two poems already mentioned as well as "Four Quartets" (in which a whole section is devoted to time and its philosophy) and then take the important works of other key figures of Modernism and the movement's characteristics into comparison in order to determine whether Eliot's seeming obsession is a fruit of its era or a personal motif of the poet.
Źródło:
World Scientific News; 2016, 52; 207-215
2392-2192
Pojawia się w:
World Scientific News
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
September 11 and the Outbreak of Neo-Orientalism in John Updike’s Terrorist
Autorzy:
Mitra, Mirzayee
Shamsoddin, Royanian
Ensieh, Shabanirad
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1178289.pdf
Data publikacji:
2017
Wydawca:
Przedsiębiorstwo Wydawnictw Naukowych Darwin / Scientific Publishing House DARWIN
Tematy:
Civilization
Democracy
Islam
Jihadist
Modernity
Muslim
Neo-Orientalism
Opis:
The portrait of Muslims in politics, media, and literature has been mostly partial images of people separated from civilization. Since September 11 attacks, the Global War on Terror was fought on many fronts, including the ideological war of words and images that rages on the cinema screens across the globe as well as the pages of pop fiction. Western cultural production since September 11 has remained deeply influenced by the events of that single fateful day. The Twin Towers have gone up in flames again and again in a very large number of textual and visual narratives like novels, short stories, films, documentaries and prose analyses. To take a critical view to 9/11 and famous narratives it encumbered is the subject of this study. The Neo-orientalists say that many Muslims are Islamic fundamentalists who are “irreconcilable” with modern Western democratic values and culture. Different novels have been written after the September 11 attacks which are related explicitly or implicitly to with the effect of the event on the changing view of the people toward Muslims.
Źródło:
World Scientific News; 2017, 86, 3; 226-241
2392-2192
Pojawia się w:
World Scientific News
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-5 z 5

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