poetics

IPA: poʊˈɛtɪks

noun

  • (philosophy, literature) The theory of poetry, or of literature in general.
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Examples of "poetics" in Sentences

  • He directs the group of poetics.
  • Neither of these identified himself with the poetics of the romanticists.
  • His most favoured poetics is always that which allies itself with the memory of
  • The goal in immersive textuality, similar to that of McGann's quantum poetics, is to create
  • Correspondingly, radical poetics is not quite satisfied with how authorship is represented in Williams.
  • Less concern has been delivered upon passion as a principle of vitality in poetics, as part of the very structures and dynamisms of poems.
  • This may have been what was going through the mind of Derek Walcott’s mother when she used to take him through challenging formal lessons in poetics as a child.
  • This essay is a testing ground for "ambience," exploring the role of space in poetics, ideology and theory, building on the conclusion to the book The Poetics of Spice.
  • While this might be referred to as a poetics of labor it challenges the notion of what it means to be a poet if we consider poetry as also way of surviving and living in the world.
  • A remarkable prose stylist, Paz has written a prolific body of essays, including several book-length studies, in poetics, literary and art criticism, as well as on Mexican history, politics and culture.
  • The tone of your critique seems to say that conceptual poetics is not enough and in some way needs to move outside of its own discourse in order to validate your own sense of worth, which is something that conceptual poetics may never do: might be a case of round pegs in square holes.

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synonyms for poeticsdescribing words for poetics
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