David Ewick



 

Some Google searches

academic presentation, methods of English presentation, presentation evaluation worksheet

bibliography of Japonisme, of Modernism, of Orientalism

Cultural Studies bibliography

Donald Rumsfeld burn rate

education of foreign children (Yukari Himeno is #1 of “about 3,070,000,” 4/18/04)

Edward Said bibliography, Edward Said online, Edward Said in cyberspace

Eliot and Pound

Ezra Pound and Japan, and Noh, and Chinese Poetry, and the Orient, and Yeats, and Yeats and Eliot

Pound and some texts:

Affirmations, Certain Noble Plays of Japan, The Chinese Written Character as a Medium for Poetry, The Classical Stage of Japan, Cathay, Drafts & Fragments, Guide to Kulchur, How I Began, How to Read, Imagisme, Des Imagistes, In a Station of the Metro, Lustra, Nishikigi, Noh or Accomplishment, Pavannes and Divisions, Personae, The Pisan Cantos, Plays Modelled on the Noh, Selected Poems, Selected Prose, Three Cantos, The Translations, Vortex, Vorticism, Vou Club, Women of Trachis

Introduction to Orientalism

Japan and some critical terms:

absence, alterity, feminist theory, hybridity, Modernism, Orientalism, otherness, postcolonial theory, postmodernism, subaltern theory

Japanese influence in American verse and poetry, British verse and poetry, English verse and poetry, English-language verse and poetry

Japonisme and Orientalism, and Modernism, Orientalism and Modernism

the legacy of seclusion

Meiji Japan and the West

multicultural education in Japan (Ruriko Okada is #2 of “about 141,000,” 4/18/04 )

poem citation, citing a poem, how to cite a poem

reflexive textuality, reflexivity and textuality

reproduction of gender (Mari Sewaki is #3 of “about 575,000,” 4/18/04; add Japan and she is #1 of “about 61,900”)

Some other people:

W. G. Aston, Frank Brinkley, Basil Hall Chamberlain, Paul-Louis Couchoud, S. Foster Damon, F. V. Dickins, Ernest Fenollosa, F. S. Flint, Sadakichi Hartmann, Hirata Kiichi, Ichikawa Sanki, Kitasono Katsue, Algernon Mitford, Miyamori Asatarô, William N. Porter, Michel Revon, George Sansom

Some other poets and Japan:

Conrad Aiken, Richard Aldington, Laurence Binyon, Edmund Blunden, Gordon Bottomley, Witter Bynner, T. S. Eliot, Adelaide Crapsey, William Empson, Arthur Davison Ficke, John Gould Fletcher, G. S. Fraser, W. S. Gilbert, Paul Goodman, W. E. Henley, Robinson Jeffers, James Kirkup, Amy Lowell, John Masefield, Joaquin Miller, Harriet Monroe, Sturge Moore, Yone Noguchi, Alfred Noyes, William Plomer, Kenneth Rexroth, Carl Sandburg, Wallace Stevens, Arthur Waley

Yeats plays, and Japan, Yeats essays, and Japan, Yeats and Japan, and Noh, and the Orient, and theatre, and Buddhism, and Zen

Yeats and some texts:

The Abbey Theatre, Among School Children, Art and Ideas, Autobiographies, The Bounty of Sweden, The Cat and the Moon, Certain Noble Plays of Japan, Crazy Jane poems, Deirdre, The Dreaming of the Bones, Essays and Introductions, Explorations, Fergus and the Druid, A Full Moon in March, The King of the Great Clock Tower, Last Poems and Two Plays, The Letters, Meditations in Time of Civil War, Pages from a Diary, Per Amica Silentia Lunae, Plays for Dancers, Plays and Controversies, Plays in Prose and Verse, The Resurrection, The Statues, The Theatre of Beauty, The Tragic Theatre, A Vision, Wheels and Butterflies, The Winding Stair, Words for Music Perhaps, The Words Upon the Window Pane


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