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Poetry

Within poetry you will be able to explore an exciting new universe where more than 10,000 books on the subject have been gathered. Do you appreciate beautiful writing techniques, which are put together to convey a feeling, attitude or narrative? Then we ensure that you will find a poem of your liking. Among other things, we offer a selection of poems about love, life and friendship. You can find the popular poems of Lana Del Rey in ‘Violet Bent Backwards Over the Grass’ or Rupi Kaur's poems in ‘Sun and her flowers’. Our total poetry collection can of course also be found below. You will always be able to find your next poem for a sharp price here at tales.as.
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  • Save 13%
    by Oscar Aguirre-Mandujano
    £55.99

  • by Martyn Halsall
    £9.49

  • by Gabriel Fitzmaurice
    £13.49

  • Save 11%
    by Theri Alyce Pickens
    £16.99

  • Save 25%
    by Maggie Sawkins
    £8.99

  • by Louis Zukofsky
    £88.99

  • Save 10%
    by H.O.WARD
    £8.99

  • Save 13%
    by Eddie Jones
    £6.49

  • by Alan Llwyd
    £5.49

  • Save 25%
    by Emma-Jane Barlow
    £8.99

  • Save 20%
    by Angel Terron
    £7.99

  • Save 13%
    by Nikolai Duffy
    £6.99

  • Save 13%
    by James Walton
    £6.49

  • by Annie Lloyd-Hyde
    £4.99

  • Save 13%
    by Cat Hepburn
    £6.99

  • Save 27%
    by Michael Bourton
    £9.49

  • Save 20%
  • Save 35%
    by Fiona Moore
    £12.99

  • - Anglophone Responses 1970-2000
    by Callie Gardner
    £33.49 - 61.49

    The influence of Roland Barthes on contemporary culture has been the subject of much analysis, but never before has this influence been closely examined in relation to poetry. This innovative study traces Anglophone poetry's response to the literary and cultural theory of Barthes - from debate to adoption, adaptation and rejection.

  • by Giles Goodland
    £6.49

  • Save 13%
    by Isabelle P. Byrne
    £6.49

  • Save 17%
    by Charley Elbow
    £7.49

  • Save 20%
    by Charley Elbow
    £7.99

  • by Jim Parc Nest
    £10.99

    Rhyddhau'r gair, rhyddhau'r person a rhyddhau'r genedl. Dyma nod y Prifardd Jim Parc Nest wrth gyhoeddi'r gyfrol arbennig hon. Dyma fardd sy'n angerddol dros "ryddhau'r gynghanedd rhag bod yn grefft ei 'gorffennol yn unig'" a dymuna i'r gyfrol fod yn ysgogiad i lawer arbrofi gyda'r gynghanedd. Teimlwn y cyffro a'r arbrofi hwn yn ei gerddi wrth... -- Books Council of Wales

  • by Llyr Gwyn Lewis
    £10.99

  • Save 31%
     
    £50.49

    Expressive Networks convenes an urgent conversation on digital media and the social life of contemporary poetry. Tracing how poems circulate through online spaces and how capitalized platforms have come to pattern the reading and writing of poetry, contributors emphasize both the expressivist cast of digital literary culture and the deep-running ambivalence that characterizes aesthetic and critical responses to platformed cultural production. The volume features chapters on Pan- African spoken word programs, Singaporean Facebook groups, decolonial hemispheric networks, and Japanese media-critical poetries as well as platforms such as Twitter/X, Instagram, and Amazon. Though contributors write from a variety of methodological positions and address themselves to a range of archives, they share the primary conviction that the impact of Web 2.0 on literary practice is far-reaching, far from self-evident, and far more variegated and unpredictable than easy summations of social media's influence suggest. Expressive Networks asks after poetry's present and future by examining what poems themselves express about the social make-up of networked platforms. Edited by Matthew Kilbane with contributions from Cameron Awkward-Rich, Micah Bateman, Andrew Campana, Sumita Chakraborty, Scott Challener, C.R. Grimmer, Tess McNulty, Michael Nardone, Seth Perlow, Anna Preus, Susanna Sacks, Carly Schnitzler, Melanie Walsh, and Samuel Caleb Wee.

  •  
    £27.99

    Expressive Networks convenes an urgent conversation on digital media and the social life of contemporary poetry. Tracing how poems circulate through online spaces and how capitalized platforms have come to pattern the reading and writing of poetry, contributors emphasize both the expressivist cast of digital literary culture and the deep-running ambivalence that characterizes aesthetic and critical responses to platformed cultural production. The volume features chapters on Pan- African spoken word programs, Singaporean Facebook groups, decolonial hemispheric networks, and Japanese media-critical poetries as well as platforms such as Twitter/X, Instagram, and Amazon. Though contributors write from a variety of methodological positions and address themselves to a range of archives, they share the primary conviction that the impact of Web 2.0 on literary practice is far-reaching, far from self-evident, and far more variegated and unpredictable than easy summations of social media's influence suggest. Expressive Networks asks after poetry's present and future by examining what poems themselves express about the social make-up of networked platforms. Edited by Matthew Kilbane with contributions from Cameron Awkward-Rich, Micah Bateman, Andrew Campana, Sumita Chakraborty, Scott Challener, C.R. Grimmer, Tess McNulty, Michael Nardone, Seth Perlow, Anna Preus, Susanna Sacks, Carly Schnitzler, Melanie Walsh, and Samuel Caleb Wee.

  • by Sam Kemp
    £12.49

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