Sentences with phrase «new poets»

She has published three collections of poetry: Instant - flex 718 (Bloodaxe, 2013), NOT AN ESSAY (Penned in the Margins, 2012), and a Faber New Poets pamphlet (Faber and Faber, 2009).
The Lost Horse New Poets, Short Books Series, edited by Marvin Bell, is dedicated to works — often ignored by conglomerate publishers — which are so much in danger of vanishing into obscurity in what has become the age of chain stores and mass appeal food, movies, art and books.
Amaud Jamaul Johnson's «L.A. Police Chief Daryl Gates Dead at 83» appeared in Best American Poetry 2014 and Gabriella R. Tallmadge's «Marriage An Animal Language,» appeared in Best New Poets 2014.
In addition, recent years have seen the emergence of more diverse perspectives in the creation of verse novels, with many new poets to know.
Every year, Imagine Learning holds a limerick contest for budding new poets — and every year, the contest is harder to judge!
A new Poets & Quants study shows that MBAs are leaving campus with six - figure debt loads from at least 13 prominent business schools, up from only two schools in 2011.
It remains for new poet - songsters, new hymn - writers, or perhaps even for Bono or Dylan themselves, to provide the music for such a quest.
As our national poetry month ends, the 10 - year term for Britain's new poet laureate, Glasgow - born Carol Ann Duffy, begins.
The United States has a new poet laureate, Neil Gaiman is miffed with Amazon, and Judge Cote adds yet another case against Apple and the big five publishers.
Illinois legislature revives «Amazon tax»; an open letter to Librarian of Congress James Billington; the state of Washington's new poet laureate; and other news.
Best new poet you've read recently: Emily Dickinson is as modern as I have gotten, but occasionally I look at my old friend Louis Zukofsky.

Not exact matches

The Poets & Quants expose was covered around the world, from the San Jose Mercury News in Silicon Valley, to Bloomberg BusinessWeek, Forbes magazine, the New York Daily News, Business Insider, and even the feminist website Jezebel and the Daily Mail in the U.K..
A new analysis done exclusively for Poets & Quants by PayScale, which collects salary data from individuals through online pay comparison tools, shows that the MBA — even from schools that lack global or national caché, delivers hefty seven - figure income over a 20 - year period.
Three months into his new job as dean of INSEAD (no. 2 on Poets & Quants» non-U.S. MBA rankings) it's déjà vu all over again as he learns the ins and outs of a new institution.
Elite MBA talent is being heavily recruited by tech firms, especially at a few target schools, like Northwestern's Kellogg School of Business and MIT's Sloan School of Management, according to new analysis from Poets and Quants, a news website that covers business schools.
The Stanford Graduate School of Business's new employment report shows record - breaking salaries for its MBA graduates, Poets & Quants reports.
Prior to the building of Temple Court, the location was home to the Chapel Street Theater, which held the first performance of Shakespeare's «Hamlet» in New York in 1761, and Clinton Hall, a literary salon of sorts where poet Edgar Allan Poe worked.
That old cliché, «you get what you pay for,» may well ring true in a new ranking by Poets & Quants of the business schools in North America with the best Executive MBA programs.
That's one reason why Booth repeated as the top American EMBA program, according to a new 2016 composite ranking by Poets & Quants.
According to The New York Times, Steve Jobs had an «inexhaustible interest» in William Blake; Nike founder Phil Knight so reveres his library that in it you have to take off your shoes and bow; and Harman Industries founder Sidney Harman called poets «the original systems thinkers,» quoting freely from Shakespeare and Tennyson.
This debate, as old as Plato's Phaedrus, is kept alive by Page Meets Stage, a New York arts event where two poets from the two traditions square off against each other.
• The French poet and playwright Paul Claudel is, despite what many think unfortunate political views, still read «because of a rare quality: unflinching jubilance,» writes the poet Eric Ormsby in an essay on Claudel in the New Criterion.
In response to this new and, it seems, contrivedly obscure eclogue, Donald Hall writes, «When in the future flustered doctoral students confuse Auden and Austen, when Larkin becomes a small figure in the shadow of Hardy, Geoffrey Hill will remain the monumental English poet of the latter twentieth century.»
It's also inspired the church's great modern poets — the people responsible for updating the outdoor marquee with new service times and mind - boggling puns — to rise to their finest hour and show these gamers what they're missing if they just come for the Pokemon.
63 When bloody flooding killed the human race And brand - new oceans put man in his place, Except for those who carried mankind's seed, I, first of creatures, snubbed what law decreed, While I mocked yielding to the Lord's command, For which, I think, a poet would declare, «The sin....
The poet anticipates that Jerusalem will become a beehive of productivity and prosperity, a new center of international trade.
Paul Mariani's new biography of the poet provides the raw details for a rather surprising answer.
Watching him live this double life of public man and poet, one wonders what Astrue — or Juster — is really thinking when he answers the biting questions of a reporter demanding to know why the new commissioner hasn't yet personally fixed the entire Social Security system.
There are some parallels with other nonacademic American poets — William Carlos Williams, for instance, who practiced medicine and delivered thousands of New Jersey babies while writing the American epic Paterson.
The compiler, Laurance Wieder, simply chooses what he considers the best poetic rendition in English of each psalm» whether from a poet as old as Miles Coverdale or as new as Laurance Wieder.
Before the new yet old view comes clear an incalculable amount of work must be done by poets and theologians, by historical scholars and Biblical students, by ministers dealing at close range with men in this encounter, and especially by these men themselves.
Citing the Nicaraguan poet Ruben Darió, who «once cried that his soul was the object of contention «between the cathedral and pagan ruins,»» Ramos claims, «When the two heritages met they could not be combined in... a new synthesis....
A new book illuminates the formal power, moral depth, and intellectual brilliance of important American poet Anthony Hecht.
-- Nietzsche It is nothing new for poets, painters, and philosophers to harken back to Utopian «golden ages» when greatness or harmony flourished.
No rule can be final and complete; plainly enough, as the poet wrote, «new occasions teach new duties,» while «time makes ancient good uncouth.»
Allan Bloom, in his great «Interpretive Essay» on the Republic, says Plato's criticism of Homer and his own example resulted in poets like «Dante and Shakespeare» capable of «a new kind of poetry which leads beyond itself... and which supports to philosophic life.»
But language is what the poet has to work with, and so the poet is forced to take sometimes exaggerated, sometimes extreme steps to pierce the mundane, breaking up lines, using words in odd new contexts, relying on sound effects and packing the stanzas with sensuous images and fragments from scripture, and the common language of faith suddenly takes on new meaning through these odd juxtapositions.
Drawing on novelists, poets, as well as Scripture, Trotter leads us through a perilous issue with a result that opens up new options for religious expressions, as well as warnings about traditional religious language.
Strongly reminiscent of the metaphysical poets» discordia concors, the linking of opposites, «Expedition to the Pole» suggests a new direction for Dillard.
Poets, playwrights, musicians, painters and other artists created a new black aesthetics and ardently proclaimed that «black is beautiful.»
The George Washington «thumb Bible» which paraphrases the Old and New Testaments was originally written by John Taylor, a 16th century English poet.
Kenyon's life story is fascinating and wrenching, the stuff of both highbrow and middlebrow drama, She was a college student who married her much older professor, retreated with him from university life to a family farmhouse in New Hampshire, rediscovered her faith (without turning into a wild - eyed zealot), bravely battled depression, came into her own as a poet and loyally nursed her husband through two difficult bouts with cancer.
Scape by Luci Shaw:: Luci Shaw is my favourite living poet and this is her new volume of poetry.
If I were a poet... well, I wouldn't be one at all if I hadn't found a way to get a little something for myself — some - thing new
I am first defining the poetic function in a negative manner, following Roman Jakobson, as the inverse of the referential function understood in a narrow descriptive sense, then in a positive way as what in my volume on metaphor I call the metaphorical reference.7 And in this regard, the most extreme paradox is that when language most enters into fiction — e.g., when a poet forges the plot of a tragedy — it most speaks truth because it redescribes reality so well known that it is taken for granted in terms of the new features of this plot.
In the poet's words, «New occasions teach new dutiNew occasions teach new dutinew duties.
Over the course of his writing life, Augustine combined a number of elements from his fragmented culture — Neoplatonic philosophy, Roman civic morality, the heritage of the great Roman poets, Manichaeism — with his dominant but open - ended Christian faith, into a new synthesis.
The Swallow Anthology of New American Poets edited by David Yezzi Swallow Press, 360 pages, $ 19.95 In his introduction, editor and contributor David Yezzi suggests that this collection reconciles the traditional division in the poetry world between those who prefer classical forms and those who....
A charming collection of new poems by a distinguished octogenarian poet charmed still to be alive, charmed still to arise in the morning and look out at the world, charmed still to write new poems.
What we have claimed for these three poets is not new.
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