- Found in paragraph 4: (...) and poetic field itself. (...)
- Found in paragraph 5: (...) of notions such as self and other, mind and (...)
- Found in paragraph 7: (...) aloud, be it for oneself or for an audience, (...)
- Found in paragraph 9: (...) tures of the poem itself, the emphasis on me (...)
- Found in paragraph 12: (...) al culture, which itself is becoming more an (...)
- Found in paragraph 18: (...) inition of poetry itself. There no longer ex (...)
- Found in paragraph 19: (...) ), it has adapted itself to the competition (...)
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i General
ii Context, Social Groups and Environmental Issues
ii.1Producer of Lyric
Müller, Ralph / Sabban, Adela Sophia - 2025
- Found in paragraph 3: (...) stead considered herself a Lyriker (lyric po (...)
- Found in paragraph 8: (...) ship can manifest itself in various forms in (...)
- Found in paragraph 14: (...) research saw a new self-reflexivity and the (...)
- Found in paragraph 17: (...) died by Orpheus, himself a son of the muse C (...)
- Found in paragraph 20: (...) room for authorial self-designation, the te (...)
- Found in paragraph 25: (...) onomously “creating self” is only partially (...)
- Found in paragraph 26: (...) ock, who presents a self-determined type of (...)
- Found in paragraph 27: (...) productively sets itself apart from literary (...)
- Found in paragraph 28: (...) goal of individual self-formation. Schiller (...)
- Found in paragraph 29: (...) does he address himself? and what language (...)
- Found in paragraph 31: (...) artistic-religious self-understanding can b (...)
- Found in paragraph 32: (...) ce of the artwork itself, created as “art fo (...)
- Found in paragraph 33: (...) e”), the “speaking” self had been confused w (...)
- Found in paragraph 35: (...) ematic. In terms of self-representation, an (...)
- Found in paragraph 36: (...) The self-representations of (...)
- Found in paragraph 46: (...) nds on an empirical self, a fictional charac (...)
- Found in paragraph 2: (...) of subjectivity and self-discovery, its firs (...)
- Found in paragraph 3: (...) ing as a process of self-relinquishment, a m (...)
- Found in paragraph 4: (...) w, for example, for self-reflexive nature co (...)
- Found in paragraph 5: (...) e and form, are all self-reflexive. They at (...)
- Found in paragraph 7: (...) arns, like Fried himself, of the intellectua (...)
- Found in paragraph 8: (...) sire for individual self-realization, dramat (...)
- Found in paragraph 11: (...) radition presents itself as a complex interp (...)
- Found in paragraph 12: (...) logy” (Bate 1991) itself? A movement of reje (...)
- Found in paragraph 13: (...) elop contemplative, self-reflexive or phenom (...)
- Found in paragraph 16: (...) lyricism, fiercely self-critical, eschews i (...)
- Found in paragraph 19: (...) rican Poetry of the Self-Conscious Anthropoc (...)
- Found in paragraph 20: (...) the Anthropocene itself – after all, the mo (...)
- Found in bibliography / webliography
iii Distribution and Communication
iii.1Oral and Written Lyric Poetry
Müller, Adalberto - 2025
- Found in paragraph 10: (...) ciousness unfolds itself. By contrast, writi (...)
- Found in paragraph 14: (...) ority to language itself: “the voice is a wo (...)
- Found in paragraph 15: (...) he Supreme Being himself – Maa Ngala, creato (...)
- Found in paragraph 16: (...) way Islam adapted itself to this tradition, (...)
- Found in paragraph 18: (...) ographer reveals himself in relation to what (...)
- Found in paragraph 20: (...) de has to create himself by unfolding (omboj (...)
- Found in paragraph 25: (...) es and performs his self (within himself) as (...)
iii.6Peritext and Paratext in Lyric Poetry
Klimek, Sonja - 2025
- Found in paragraph 2: (...) e” of a text. He himself made his definition (...)
- Found in paragraph 6: (...) also find authorial self-annotations to lyri (...)
- Found in paragraph 11: (...) ised by the poet herself or himself, they ar (...)
iv Textual Forms, Modes, and Subgenres
- Found in paragraph 2: (...) tial for individual self-expression. In fact (...)
- Found in paragraph 3: (...) towards language itself,” insofar as “lyric (...)
- Found in paragraph 42: (...) dity, rendering the self-evident functioning (...)
- Found in paragraph 44: (...) slyrik), but saw himself as distinct from Ro (...)
- Found in paragraph 45: (...) dernes’), a greater self-confidence towards (...)
- Found in paragraph 49: (...) but of the poet himself (Mazzoni 2005, 63–6 (...)
- Found in paragraph 50: (...) art is to conceal itself. Combining this Cic (...)
- Found in paragraph 57: (...) ench poetry found itself in a crisis, as Mal (...)
- Found in paragraph 59: (...) , poetry being in itself an “art of imitatio (...)
- Found in paragraph 60: (...) son, which prided itself on its orderliness (...)
- Found in paragraph 68: (...) antik) the ideal of self-expression had repe (...)
- Found in paragraph 69: (...) subject expresses itself and its mood freely (...)
- Found in paragraph 70: (...) oetry was viewed as self-centred to the poin (...)
- Found in paragraph 71: (...) e 1960s distanced itself from hermetic tende (...)
- Found in paragraph 76: (...) ork distinguishes itself in all verse system (...)
- Found in paragraph 86: (...) , is simultaneously self-ironising or self-d (...)
- Found in paragraph 93: (...) iktor Shklovsky, himself a writer, pleads in (...)
- Found in paragraph 98: (...) lone (as Genette himself admitted), although (...)
- Found in paragraph 2: (...) tial with writing itself (Sánchez Luna 2016, (...)
- Found in paragraph 11: (...) ng visual images himself in his prose. (...)
- Found in paragraph 18: (...) points at writing itself in an autoreferenti (...)
- Found in paragraph 19: (...) s since the title itself, Haroldo de Campos (...)
- Found in paragraph 21: (...) Operations (1963), self-published by La Mon (...)
- Found in paragraph 26: (...) ints out, writing itself, by virtue of its g (...)
- Found in paragraph 30: (...) er code, the code itself being an articulati (...)
- Found in paragraph 32: (...) resemble writing itself? We could say that (...)
- Found in paragraph 1: (...) ecause our interior self-image is strongly d (...)