DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Page: 1 2 3
Hits 1 – 20 of 45

1
Contesting language policy for asylum seekers in the Northern periphery: the story of Tailor F [<Journal>]
Pöyhönen, Sari [Verfasser]; Simpson, James [Verfasser]
DNB Subject Category Language
Show details
2
Translanguaging as transformation : the collaborative construction of new linguistic realities
Moore, Emilee (Herausgeber); Bradley, Jessica (Herausgeber); Simpson, James (Herausgeber). - Blue Ridge Summit : Multilingual Matters, 2020
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
3
Motion, contact and profanity in Rutebeuf’s tales of ‘Charlot Le Juif’: (not) going there, (not) touching that
Simpson, James R.. - : Oxford University Press, 2020
BASE
Show details
4
Theorising arts-based collaborative research processes
Fay, Richard; Andrews, Jane; Frimberger, Katja. - : Multilingual Matters, 2020
BASE
Show details
5
The engagement of BAAL - and applied linguistics - with policy and practice
Fitzpatrick, Tess; Baynham, Mike; Cook, Guy. - : White Rose University Press, 2019
BASE
Show details
6
A linguistic ethnography of theatre production
Zezulka, KL. - : White Rose University Press, 2019
BASE
Show details
7
HIV/AIDS antenatal consultations as regulative discourse : the case of Malawi
Chimbwete-Phiri, Rachel; MacDonald, Malcolm. - : White Rose University Press, 2019
BASE
Show details
8
Adult language education and migration : challenging agendas in policy and practice
Simpson, James; Whiteside, Anne. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, 2015
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
9
Poetry, Desire, and Devotional Performance From Shakespeare to Milton, 1609-1667
Hokama, Rhema. - 2015
Abstract: Poetry, Desire, and Devotional Performance from Shakespeare to Milton, 1609-1667 documents and analyzes the ways post-Reformation devotional and worship practices inflected early modern English poetic conceptions of erotic desire and intimacy. My study focuses on two specific Reformation religious developments—the official Anglican ceremonialism of the state church and the popular Reformed predestinarianism—each of which enjoyed a widespread following during the roughly sixty years bracketed by the lives of Shakespeare and Milton. While religious historians often treat state-sanctioned worship and popular divinity as contradictory or antagonistic, I demonstrate that both cultural arenas reveal one important commonality: each sought to prioritize the body as the most important means for externally verifying inner devotional affect. Whether sanctioned by the state church or only informally practiced, post-Reformation English devotional practices embodied the seventeenth-century’s deep suspicion of outward signs of inner affect—one that that coexisted with an equally powerful impulse to venerate those very outward markers of grace. In a religious culture that regarded outward performance as devotionally suspect, the body and the senses nevertheless remained vital to the way individuals could outwardly demonstrate and interpret their inward affect. I maintain that outward devotional performance did more than provide the material and external scaffolding by which individuals could conceptualize their relationship with God. Moreover, it provided early modern thinkers and poets with a lexicon and a conceptual apparatus for describing and interpreting devotional intention and access within the context of a wide range of earthly entanglements and fleshly negotiations. Most significantly, the religious developments of the English Reformation informed the way poets conceptualized access within decidedly secular, earthly, and erotic relationships—shaping the way English men and women read and interpreted the impulses and desires of both others and themselves. My project examines the role of the body—desired and desiring—at the crossroads of both erotic and devotional life in the poetry of Shakespeare, Donne, Greville, Herrick, and Milton. In these poems, God, dead wives, standoffish mistresses, exes, whores, homoerotic boy lovers, and even Satan play distinct parts as both antagonists and objects of longing. Within the space of a few decades of the early seventeenth-century century, the absolutism that characterized nearly every aspect of English religious life opened possibilities for thinking about the role of the body in matters both spiritual and secular that emerged not in opposition to, but as a direct result of, the limitations placed on the ways individuals could conceive of and express their most powerful desires. These articulations of devotional longing—whether for earthly lovers or for God—were enabled precisely by the spiritual and psychological constraints posed by the ever tightening restrictions on public worship and prayer. ; English ; William Shakespeare; John Milton; John Donne; Fulke Greville; Robert Herrick; Renaissance; early modern; lyric; poetry; common prayer; Anglicanism; Puritanism; experimental predestination; Richard Hooker; William Perkins; antitheatricalism; performance; devotion; desire; theater
Keyword: English; History of; Literature; Religion; Theater
URL: http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:23845451
BASE
Hide details
10
Natural Law and the Law of Nature in Early British Beast Literature
BASE
Show details
11
Conversational floor in computer-mediated discourse
In: Pragmatics of computer-mediated communication Handbooks of pragmatics. - 9 (2013)
IDS Mannheim
12
Identity alignment on an ESOL class blog
In: International journal of applied linguistics. - Oxford [u.a.] : Blackwell 23 (2013) 2, 183-201
OLC Linguistik
Show details
13
Contemporary applied linguistics
In: Journal of multilingual & multicultural development. - Colchester : Routledge 34 (2013) 3, 308-310
OLC Linguistik
Show details
14
Turning verse conversions? Mise en page and metre in Rutebeuf’s 'Le Miracle de Théophile'
Simpson, James R.. - : Brepols Publishers, 2013
BASE
Show details
15
Discourses about linguistic diversity
In: The Routledge handbook of multilingualism (New York, 2012), p. 116-130
MPI für Psycholinguistik
Show details
16
The Routledge handbook of applied linguistics
Simpson, James (Hrsg.). - 1. ed. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, 2011
IDS Mannheim
Show details
17
Telling tales: discursive space and narratives in ESOL classrooms
In: Linguistics and education. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier 22 (2011) 1, 10-22
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
Show details
18
The Routledge handbook of applied linguistics
Simpson, James (Hrsg.). - London [u.a.] : Routledge, 2011
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
19
Continuum Companion to Research Methods in Applied Linguistics
Simpson, James. - : Oxford University Press, 2011
BASE
Show details
20
Stylistics
Semino, Elena. - : Routledge, 2011
BASE
Show details

Page: 1 2 3

Catalogues
4
2
15
0
1
0
1
Bibliographies
10
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
0
0
0
0
Open access documents
17
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern