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From:The AnaChronisT (Vol. 18, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis essay is focused on some temperamental and conceptual relations between Blake's vision and Ludwig Zinzendorf's theology and practice, and hopes to contribute, however modestly, to the clarification of the question...
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From:Journal of Literary Studies (Vol. 28, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedSummary Drawing principally from Mental Fight and Jerusalem, this article explores the ways in which both Ben Okri and William Blake prophesy the redemption of humanity through the power of words and the...
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From:Studies in Romanticism (Vol. 52, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedRECENT WORK IN ROMANTIC STUDIES--INDEED, IN ENGLISH STUDIES more broadly--has called for a renewed attention to the material-culture contexts with which literary expression is always in dialogue. In the past decade,...
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From:Literature-Film Quarterly (Vol. 41, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedMy Co-Editor Dave Johnson began the editorial of our last issue with the subject of writing. He expressed a desire to see more instructive writing about writing, especially in terms of exploring the conditions necessary...
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From:Studies in Romanticism (Vol. 43, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedTHE BOOK OF URIZEN, CONCEIVED AS THE "FIRST" BOOK OF THE DEVILISH "Bible of Hell" that William Blake announced in 1793 in The Marriage of Heaven and Hell (Plate 24), (1) satirizes theories of creation favored by the...
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From:Style (Vol. 30, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedCriticism of Blake's "The Fly" has routinely maintained that it is an especially cryptic poem, but has also assumed that the "events" portrayed in it are utterly stable. Those events, however, have been actively...
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From:The Chronicle of Higher Education (Vol. 57, Issue 10)Byline: Mark Edmundson Sometimes you need some help to see what's directly in front of you: It's often the most difficult thing to see. Looking for a compressed vision of the state of America now, I'm inclined to...
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From:Studies in Romanticism (Vol. 49, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed1 ORIGINALLY PRODUCED IN 1793, VISIONS OF THE DAUGHTERS OF ALBION has become one of Blake's most widely read and interpreted prophecies. Critical interpretations range from the historical to the rhetorical and...
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From:The Architectural Review (Vol. 219, Issue 1307)To see a World in a grain of sand, And a Heaven in a wild flower, Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand, And Eternity in an hour. How many times have I repeated this beautiful poem by William Blake to my students,...
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From:Wordsworth Circle (Vol. 49, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedWilliam Blake executed twelve large color prints in 1795. He printed thirty-three impressions over three printings, twenty-nine of which are extant. (1) His method for printing colors to produce paintings was radical...
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From:The Journal of English and Germanic Philology (Vol. 100, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedOne of the crucial and central events in William Blake's Milton is Milton's descent; this culminating moment is located physically and temporally at the point where Milton enters the tarsus of Blake's left foot, when...
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From:Victorian Poetry (Vol. 48, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed"'I sing,' says the modern Bard, 'speaking to the eye alone, by the help of type-founders, papermakers, compositors, ink balls, folding, and stitching.'" Published in a review of Eliza Cook's poetry in the...
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From:Ploughshares (Vol. 41, Issue 1)Lately, I see through a narrow chink in a stairgate. I see doors and think: can I get my pram through that? In the park, I dole out small snacks-- ricecake, popped grapes, elven cheeses. If the doors of perception were...
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From:Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (Vol. 3, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis article speculates on the place of contradiction in the symbolic construction of the world. There has been much anthropological work on the ubiquity of symbolic classification in human society and culture, but...
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From:Papers on Language & Literature (Vol. 28, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedWilliam Blake's poems 'America,' 'Europe' and 'The Song of Los' foretold the coming of Revelation through the French and American Revolutions. He followed the common trend in English Romantic literary and visual works to...
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From:ELH (Vol. 60, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedWilliam Blake's 'The Marriage of Heaven and Hell' reshaped the myth of Satan according to the characteristics of Romantic art. 'The Marriage' reenvisioned hell in surprisingly unconventional terms which reflected the...
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From:Wordsworth Circle (Vol. 39, Issue 3) Peer-Reviewed"Rather than merely suggesting that an arbitrary boundary of scientific respectability should be pushed out a little farther," Thomas L. Hankins and Robert J. Silverman wrote, "these marginal instruments lead us to...
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From:Apollo (Vol. 187, Issue 662)William Blake in Sussex: Visions of Albion Petworth House, West Sussex 13 January-25 March -- Catalogue by Andrew Loukes et al. ISBN 9781911300298 (paperback), 16.50 [pounds sterling] (Paul Holberton...
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From:Apollo (Vol. 166, Issue 547)This year we have two exhibitions devoted to the theme of slavery in William Blake s art and writing, one at Tate Britain and the other a touring exhibition organised by the Hayward Gallery with the British Museum. They...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 114, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedWHEN I moved in with my partner Frank, nine years ago, I quickly discovered that the new soundtrack of my life would be opera, at hitherto unimagined decibels. He washed dishes and did e-mail and snaked out clogged...