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  1. 1781

    Zum Verhältnis von Tragödie, Lyrik und Moderne by Thomas Emmrich

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…Hölderlin shares Hegel’s theoretical premises regarding history and genre, but he arrives at a diametrically opposed understanding of poetry: For him, it is not a form that reflects subjective particularity in modernity as in Hegel, but a medium with which the correlation between subjectivity and substantiality can be rehabilitated. …”
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  2. 1782

    O oglindă a principilor? Predicile lui Pelbartus de Themeswar despre Ștefan cel Sfânt al Ungariei by Alexandra Baneu

    Published 2018-12-01
    “…My paper tries to see to what extent a series of sermons dedicated to a ruler that has been sanctified can be comprised under this genre. After analyzing the three sermons that Pelbartus of Themeswar dedicated to the feast of Saint Stephen the Great of Hungary, I conclude that, although the three texts are influenced to a great degree by this type of writings, they cannot be included in the literary subgenre of mirrors for princes unless the sphere of the definition, which seems too narrow to begin with, is extended.…”
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  3. 1783

    « A Flight », de Charles Dickens (1851), récit de voyage ? by Isabelle Hervouet-Farrar

    Published 2012-06-01
    “…Dickens’s article is published today by Penguin both as a piece of journalism (in Selected Journalism) and as a piece of fiction (in Selected Short Fiction), which raises the question of the genre(s) to which it belongs. This paper aims at showing that far from being a classic travel narrative offering a modicum of objectivity, « A Flight » shows us how fiction is created when a hyper-active narrator uses every exterior detail as a pretext to the expression of his creative energy. …”
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  4. 1784

    Postmigracyjny background i co z niego wynika. Rewolty tożsamościowe dzieci późnych przesiedleńców w prozie faktograficznej Emilii Smechowski, "My, super imigranci" by Joanna Szydłowska

    Published 2023-12-01
    “…The paper looks at the consequences of the tensions resulting from the migrant background as regards genre choices (reportage/self-reportage/autobiography), thematic interests (the text grew between cultures and languages), and identity definitions. …”
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  5. 1785

    Men of Letters: W.B. Yeats’s A Packet for Ezra Pound (1929) by Adrian PATERSON

    Published 2018-06-01
    “…Considering it formally alongside Yeats’s letters as a bookish yet speech-driven manifesto, this paper argues that what appears as a provisional, peripheral, prefatorial work is nonetheless central to understanding Yeats and Pound’s evolving thinking, and critical to an understanding of modernist networks. Its genre-bending, pan-artistic vision, intertextuality, and playing with paratextual apparatus produces a self-conscious construction typical of modernism, even as it claims distance from modernist aesthetics and dissents from its politics.…”
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  6. 1786

    Madame Bovary et ses trente-quatre « vous », ou le retour du refoulé by Alain Vaillant

    Published 2017-06-01
    “…His readers, or more often his female readers: for the close analysis of these thirty-four occurrences proves not only that the recollection of romantic lyricism, even ironized, hovers over Flaubert’s writing, but that the author has a hard time dissimulating his male identity, then addressing his subtle analyst’s explanations to an audience of women: obviously impersonality has strict limits, those of genre (or gender).…”
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  7. 1787

    LA PRÉFIGURATION DU SPECTACLE D’OPÉRA by Diana TODEA

    Published 2012-12-01
    “…The purpose is that of clearifying the controversial evolution of the genre and the theatrical-musical forms that preceded it. …”
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  8. 1788

    Narrativität hören by Kerstin Hausbei

    Published 2024-07-01
    “…In the case of disruptions of automated perception through the dissonant clash of naturalized genre expectations and listening patterns, however, they also trigger the search for subjectively experienced coherence in listening, thus allowing alternative constructions of narrativity to become active in listening. …”
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  9. 1789

    Los álbumes ilustrados de Raquel Díaz Reguera: Itinerario lector imprescindible para la educación en valores / Raquel Díaz Reguera’s illustrated albums: an essential reading itiner... by Isabel Llamas Martínez, María del Carmen Quiles Cabrera, Gabriel Núñez Molina

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Through a qualitative description of her career as a creator within this genre, we will highlight the author’s commitment to themes of great social and educational importance. …”
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  10. 1790

    Polyphénols et activités antioxydantes des fruits de Grewia spp. consommés par les bonobos à Luikotale, R.D. Congo by C‑Désiré Musuyu Muganza, Ulrich Maloueki, Kumugo S‑P Ndimbo, Ikombe N Bondjengo, Mukulire J Malekani, Nseu B Mbomba, Barbara Fruth

    Published 2014-01-01
    “…Congo, au Sud du Parc National de la Salonga sur le site de recherche du Max-Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology (MPI-EVA) à Luikotale, ont montré que les fruits du genre Grewia font parties de la diète de ces primates. …”
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  11. 1791

    Floating Cities: Xi Xi, Magritte, and the Insouciance of Allegory by Gray Kochhar-Lindgren

    Published 2025-01-01
    “… `Floating Cities: Xi Xi, Magritte, and the Insouciance of Allegory’ examines the ekphrastic relation of text and image in relation to the operations of analogy, the proportions of which have cracked, and allegory as an insouciant genre. Xi Xi’s short-story `Marvels of a Floating City’ is clearly linked to a reflection on Hong Kong’s hand-over from London to Beijing in 1997, but it also passes through that fixed date to ask how such an image-text might operate along different registers as we pass from Aristotle toward Benjamin and Deleuze. …”
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  12. 1792

    WRITTEN CODE SWITCHING: THE CASE OF INDONESIAN EMAIL USERS by Nani Hizriani

    Published 2017-05-01
    “…Moreover, this might lead to a better understanding of the use of code switching, especially in the emerging genre of Internet communication. …”
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  13. 1793

    Writing research differently by Margaret Malone, Jourdan Davis, Stephen Muecke, Karen Schwartz, Chantal Trudel, Liz Weaver

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…This collection of community-based research articles explores the many ways in which the standard genre conventions of the research article – order, structure, headings, images and quotes – can be creatively called upon to make visible on the page other worlds, other futures, other ways of knowing and being. …”
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  14. 1794

    'Goet, Origineel, ende Autentijcq’ by Jacqueline Hylkema

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…It appears that the role of printing privileges was limited in this genre, but the possible reasons behind this are relevant too in the context of the relationship between authority and printing privileges. …”
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  15. 1795

    „Trwały tańce długo w noc” – w poszukiwaniu opisów tańca w diariuszu Stefana Paca. XVII-wieczne pamiętnikarstwo wobec problemu opisu rzeczywistości niematerialnej by Agnieszka Zgraja

    Published 2023-12-01
    “…The discussion centres on 17th-century memoir writing, exploring both its possibilities and its genre-specific limitations. The study examines descriptions of dance included in the itinerary of Stefan Pac, who accompanied Prince Władysław Vasa on his grand tour. …”
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  16. 1796

    The Hybridity of Popular Culture in The Winter’s Tale by François Laroque

    Published 2011-12-01
    “…In his foreword to The Faithful Shepherdess (1609), John Fletcher blames the crass popular tastes of his theatre audiences for failing to respond properly to the new genre of tragicomedy. Shakespeare was careful to make no such mistake. …”
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  17. 1797

    The function of rhetorical devices in pleasantry of Baharestan Jami by یدالله شکری, عباس سعیدی

    Published 2014-12-01
    “…Literal pleasantry is one of the manifestations of humor in classic literature which along with humor genre has come to appearance in critical literature due to the dominant atmosphere in the society of its time and the ineligibility for creating social humor and has achieved a special position for itself. …”
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  18. 1798

    Story and Recall in First-Person Shooters by Dan Pinchbeck

    Published 2008-01-01
    “…Nevertheless, in the FPS genre there has been something of a renaissance in the notion of the story-driven title. …”
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  19. 1799

    Merveilleux-scientifique et merveilleux-logique chez Maurice Renard : une épistémologie romancée ? by Hugues Chabot

    Published 2018-06-01
    “…At the time when Maurice Renard appropriated the designations “merveilleux-scientifique” (scientific-marvellous) and “merveilleux-logique” (logical-marvellous) to formalize the literary genre that he calls for, the development of a logic of scientific discovery is required simultaneously as the program of epistemology. …”
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  20. 1800

     “Here on the Verge of Town . . . I Am Myself” : Selective Western Exceptionalism in the Work of Six Contemporary Idaho Writers by Susan H. Swetnam

    Published 2011-09-01
    “…Across the boundaries of gender and genre, these writers debunk the notions that the West is a friendly, open place that values non-conformity (particularly self-determination in women); that the region inherently fosters strong families; and that the opportunities of the West all but assure success and happiness. …”
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