scholarly journals Narration Change of North Korean Literary History Reviewed Through Evaluation Aspect of Woo-cheol Kim's Poems -Focusing on ‘Peaceful Democratic Construction Period’〜‘Post-war Reconstruction and Socialism Foundation Construction Period’-

EOMUNYEONGU ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 76 (null) ◽  
pp. 205-233
Author(s):  
이승이
Author(s):  
Lies Wesseling

This article probes the extent to which literary history and cultural history may mutuallyilluminate each other, without neglecting the poetic dimension of literary works. Thispoetic dimension is embedded within the genre repertoires that shape the production andreception of literary works. One should therefore take into close account that the literaryrepresentation of social conflict is always deflected by the prism of genre conventions.Focusing on the case study of the Dutch Gothic novel, I argue that Gothic tales provide aspecific take on the post-war modernization of the Netherlands. As such, they make avaluable contribution to historical debates about the periodization of the sixties andseventies, not in spite of, but because of their specific poetic properties. Thus, it is verywell possible to bring literary works to bear upon the discussion of historical issueswithout either infringing upon the relative autonomy of the literary system or neglectingthe specific expertise of literary studies as a discipline in its own rights.


2021 ◽  

This year’s issue of Limbus contains essays which deal with the subject of murder in highly diverse ways. These contributions include the perspectives of legal philosophy in the 19th and 20th centuries, modern criminalistics, literary history and Marxist philosophy, among others. In literary history, murder cannot only drive a plot but also stimulate the soul, an anthropological mystery which is of particular interest for research into literary anthropology. Several of the contributions focus on the figure of the murderer, while others address the idea of women as murder victims. Furthermore, other essays examine both the ‘murder mystery literature’ of the post-war period and contemporary crime fiction. An essay which deals with the subject of ‘planetary murder’ using science fiction texts that focus on nuclear war completes the volume.


Author(s):  
Lyndsey Stonebridge

This book is about how a generation of writers and intellectuals in the mid-twentieth century responded to the emergence of a new category of person in the world: the modern refugee whose history, as has recently become clear once more, is also the history of the changing meanings of political and national citizenship in the later twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. The introduction offers a critical review of how literary and legal history eventually ended up telling the same story about exile and statelessness in the post-war period: the exile, usually European, emerges as an individual of conscience and agency, a victim of persecution who, nonetheless, is of his time; and the exile’s others, the refugees, sometimes but usually not European, caught in the dehumanizing movements of mass displacement and whose existence is recognized neither by the humanism of human rights nor by literary history.


Author(s):  
Timo Müller

Some of the most famous African American poems are sonnets: Claude McKay’s “If We Must Die,” Countee Cullen’s “Yet Do I Marvel,” Gwendolyn Brooks’s “First fight. Then fiddle.” Few readers realize that these poems come from a rich tradition of more than a thousand sonnets written by African American poets over a century and a half. The African American Sonnet: A Literary History traces this forgotten tradition from the nineteenth century to the present. Based on extensive archival research, the study demonstrates that closer attention to the sonnet modifies our understanding of key developments in African American literary history. Each chapter addresses such a development: the struggle over the legacy of the Civil War, the trajectories of Harlem Renaissance protest, the tensions between folk art and transnational perspectives in the thirties, the vernacular modernism of the post-war period, the cultural nationalism of the Black Arts movement, and the disruptive strategies of recent experimental poetry. Throughout this rich history, the study argues, sonnets have been “troubling spaces” in more ways than one. The sonnet became a contested space when black poets appropriated the “scanty plot of ground” (Wordsworth) from which they had long been excluded. The sonnets written by these poets troubled the material and discursive boundaries African Americans have been facing in a society organized around racial inequality. The confrontation and subversion of boundaries is inscribed into the very structure of the sonnet, which made it a preferred testing ground for such strategies in the literary realm.


2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 399-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phoebe Weston-Evans ◽  
Colin Nettelbeck

This article identifies and examines the largely overlooked corpus of the introductory and acceptance speeches relating to the French Nobel Literature Prize laureates in the post-World War II period. Following a broadly chronological development, it illuminates the tensions between the national and the international perspectives inherent in the process, analysing how individual laureates negotiate their creative trajectories within a longer-term historical shift towards a transnational literary paradigm. Within that context of a changing ethos, the war experience itself is shown to be of pervasive and persistent importance, informing both the writers’ construction of their imaginary worlds, and the reception/perception of those worlds within the Nobel framework. Such special problems as Sartre’s attempted refusal of the prize and Beckett’s ambiguous national identity are used to propose a different viewpoint on France’s recent literary history, from the era of Gide and Mauriac to the more contemporary one of Simon, Le Clézio and Modiano.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arleta Galant

In the article, the author presents an interpretation of the novel Szpital Czerwonego Krzyża by Michał Choromański. One of the key interpretative hypothesis advanced by the author of the article based on a reading of the novel is the assumption that the work constitutes an important statement on masculinity and disability, exposing the artificiality and unoriginality of masculine gender roles and criticizing somatic culture. This criticism is, in turn, significant with regard to twentieth-century reflections on body issues in post-war modernity. The author of the article indicates that Choromański’s work, written before the Second World War but published not until 1956, is a piece of significancefor the reconstruction of issues of disability in terms of Polish literary history.


Author(s):  
Maxime Van Steen

In Flemish literary history, it is generally understood that the cultural (youth) periodicalspublished briefly after the liberation (1944-1950) played a considerable role in the elaborationof the post-war literary field (Brems & De Geest 1988, 10). Nonetheless, thisinteresting thesis has not lead to an in-depth investigation of these periodicals. This lackof interest can be ascribed to: (1) statements of academics on the bad quality of the primarytexts, (2) the incomplete periodical archive and (3) the size of the corpus. In this article,I will present a workable proposal to study these post-war periodicals, despite theseobjections, building on a comprehensive outline of the strongly revalued (inter)nationalresearch on literary periodicals.


2012 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 137-154
Author(s):  
Ewa Kraskowska

Summary This article deals with the methodological problems involved in constructing a history of women’s writing. It also presents an outline history of women’s writing in Poland and a review of the state of research in that field. Although women’s writing is an integral part of Polish literature, the author argues that its development is influenced by specific factors which determine the cultural and social condition of women in a given historical time. Consequently, the periodization of women’s writing should take into account criteria and divisions which do not always coincide with the customary reference points of the mainstream literary history. The author also compiles a list of some specific problems of the historiography of Polish women’s writing which require more focused attention on the part of researchers, ie. the phenomenon of the second-rank female writer, subgenres of women’s writing, and the work of female writers from the interwar period, who continued to write in the post-war Poland.


2019 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 263-272
Author(s):  
David Martens ◽  
Galia Yanoshevsky

In the literary history of French-speaking countries, and France in particular, the appearance and development of illustrated pocket-sized collections is an editorial phenomenon typical of the boom decades of the post-war era (les trentes glorieuses). Initially devoted to writers, series of this type were later opened to philosophers and artists. While these projects of intellectual and cultural mediation may seem relatively simple, both in their form and in the issues they raise, they do present a diversity of points of view. They are also in fine part of a literary heritage – and more broadly, a cultural industry. These books have actively contributed to the development and dissemination of authors’ images, and have thus shaped the literary canon. Indeed, the very principle of the collection has a canonizing effect.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document