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74 Results Found

  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
10,102 Views
32 Pages

6 February 2015

This essay takes up the encounter between philosophy and literature through a reconsideration of Walter Benjamin’s remarks from “On Some Motifs in Baudelaire” about Henri Bergson’s Matière et mémoire as an attempt “[t]owering above” other ventures in...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1,459 Views
14 Pages

25 February 2025

This article examines the functional transformation of Buddhist temples from religious edifices to elements of the political landscape in Northern Wei Luoyang, in order to elucidate the grandiose portrayal of these temples in geographical records. Th...

  • Proceeding Paper
  • Open Access
4,487 Views
10 Pages

28 November 2017

The novels of Yasunari Kawabata (1899–1972) have no well-constructed plot, but rather a series of situations that emerge directly from images, in a sort of concrete visual thought that overshadows the storyline. Yukiguni [Snow Country], his masterpie...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
3,265 Views
19 Pages

2 August 2023

This article compares two biblical accounts: the description of the construction of the Tabernacle (Ex. 25–40), and its connection to the myth of Eve’s creation (Gen. 2). I aim to reveal the literary and symbolic links between “femi...

  • Feature Paper
  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
1,840 Views
11 Pages

6 August 2024

The motif of travel has always been popular, and the metaphor of life as a path remains extremely powerful. Both seem to be especially important within Christian culture because of the image of Christ the Wanderer, who “has no place to lay his...

  • Article
  • Open Access
9,166 Views
15 Pages

27 December 2013

This paper reviews Gaston Leroux’s Phantom of the Opera in the context of the social and cultural changes of the metropolis Paris at the end of the 19th century. The Phantom of the Opera, a success in the literary world and widely proliferated in its...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1,335 Views
20 Pages

1 September 2025

By the end of the nineteenth century, picture postcards had become ubiquitous not only as an inexpensive means of communication but also as objects for collection. Literary postcards were especially popular in Russia, and the rapid proliferation of c...

  • Proceeding Paper
  • Open Access
1 Citations
3,461 Views
24 Pages

Today metaliterature encompasses the picture book but there are not specifics studies about it. This paper explores picture-book publishing in Italy and analyses the work by Oliver Jeffers and Sam Winston A Child of Books (2016), recipient of the 201...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
2,154 Views
16 Pages

8 July 2024

The “Functional interchangeability of Six Roots” also known as the “Six Roots being unrestraint” is according to thoughts regarding Tathagatagarbha in the Śūraṅgama Sūtra, rather than mysterious personal e...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
4,315 Views
19 Pages

6 April 2022

This article expands upon the function of an adulterous episode in Chapter X, Book II of Alfonso Martínez’s Corbacho. The tale of adulterous deception may use, parodically, Madonna lactans imagery to reveal women’s sinful nature, t...

  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
3,841 Views
21 Pages

31 May 2019

This article argues that in postcolonial and post-secular Australia, a country in which Christianity has been imported from Europe in the process of colonization in the eighteenth century by the British Empire, institutional Christianity is waning in...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1,507 Views
15 Pages

7 August 2025

Radegund of Poitiers (520–587) was a princess of the Thuringian kingdom, wife to the Merovingian king Clothar I, and ultimately domina of the abbey of Sainte-Croix in Poitiers. The literary persona of Saint Radegund, as constructed by the poet-...

  • Article
  • Open Access
727 Views
33 Pages

13 October 2025

This article explores the underlying ideas conveyed by the literary representations associated with Luqmān b. ʿĀd and Luqmān the Sage in classical Arabic sources. It avoids conflating them or collapsing all portrayals of Luqmā...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1,317 Views
16 Pages

11 June 2025

In American Hybrid (2009), Cole Swenson describes hybrid poetics as a reconciliation between the two dominant poetic traditions of the 20th century, which might be called lyric and experimental (xx–xxi). More recently, however, “hybrid&rd...

  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
5,831 Views
17 Pages

7 January 2022

Narratives of willow trees in Yuan zaju 雜劇, or variety play, largely come in three types, namely, the ritual performance of shooting willows; the deliverance of willow spirits by Lü Dongbin, one of the Eight Immortals of Daoism; an...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
4,172 Views
20 Pages

19 September 2022

The article contains a comparative study of the visual poetics observed in the literary texts of American writer Ambrose Bierce and Russian-American writer Vladimir Nabokov. In particular, the study focuses on Bierce’s short story “An Occ...

  • Proceeding Paper
  • Open Access
3,044 Views
9 Pages

The contribution intends to examine the relationships between the image of the city and its spatial context, real or virtual, through the analysis of Pietro Chiesa’s artistic windows (1892–1948). In its production, the size of the inhabited space, em...

  • Article
  • Open Access
342 Views
20 Pages

8 January 2026

Despite being the most popular sutra tableau in Dunhuang, the utter lack of any comprehensive, or chronological academic analysis even in Chinese calls for a thorough research on the Medicine Buddha Sutra iconography at Dunhuang. This paper will expl...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
6,428 Views
16 Pages

3 December 2019

Hervé Guibert (1955–1991), a French writer and photographer, began developing a double artistic practice in 1977. In 1988, he discovers he has HIV and his literary and photographic works begin to reflect each other in an attempt to tell...

  • Proceeding Paper
  • Open Access
2,503 Views
11 Pages

The European cultural context, where the series Le Cento Città dItalia—Supplemento mensile illustrato del Secolo (Milan, Sonzogno 1887–1902) can be situated, has been characterized by a great diffusion of publications based on illustrated issues. Th...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
18,622 Views
17 Pages

Science Walden: Exploring the Convergence of Environmental Technologies with Design and Art

  • Hyun-Kyung Lee,
  • Kyung Hwa Cho,
  • Changsoo Lee,
  • Jaeweon Cho,
  • Huiyuhl Yi,
  • Yongwon Seo,
  • Gi-Hyoug Cho,
  • Young-Nam Kwon,
  • Changha Lee and
  • Kyong-Mi Paek

28 December 2016

Science Walden, which is inspired by two prominent literary works, namely, Walden by Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862) and Walden Two by Burrhus Frederic Skinner (1904–1990), is aimed at establishing a community that embodies humanistic values while em...

  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
3,861 Views
11 Pages

13 November 2020

“The legacy of the Shoah” writes Eva Hoffman, a child of Holocaust survivors, “is being passed on to … the post-generation … The inheritance … is being placed in our hands, perhaps in our trust.” We are en...

  • Article
  • Open Access
2,338 Views
14 Pages

19 December 2024

This paper examines how Chinese people affiliated with different religions and ideologies of the Song period (960–1279 CE) used artistic, literary and visual representations to merge mountains and the natural world with the human body. This fus...

  • Article
  • Open Access
4,094 Views
10 Pages

16 July 2020

This essay aims at adding to the critical debate on Angela Carter and myths from a more technical perspective and discusses her keen interest in the “lo and behold” moment of recognition. I claim that for Carter myths “work” i...

  • Feature Paper
  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
10,426 Views
19 Pages

11 January 2017

Elizabeth Bishop’s poetry has won the admiration of a number of Christian poets and scholars. This essay argues that one reason for this is Bishop’s subtle engagement with the work of the poet-divines Gerard Manley Hopkins and, especially, George Her...

  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
7,515 Views
19 Pages

24 November 2020

This paper explores the metaphorical and material significance of short-lived fabric dyes in medieval and early modern South Asian art, literature, and religious practice. It explores dyers’ manuals, paintings, textiles, and popular and devotio...

  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
7,320 Views
24 Pages

26 August 2021

This study examines the multiplicity of styles and heterogeneity of the arts created on the southern coasts of India during the period of colonial rule. Diverging from the trajectory of numerous studies that underline biased and distorted conceptions...

  • Article
  • Open Access
5,447 Views
30 Pages

9 August 2021

The aim of this paper is to show the presence of religion and the particular evolution of lyrical matrixes connected to religion in the Polish poems of female poets. There is a particular presence of women in the roots of the Polish literary and lyri...

  • Article
  • Open Access
4 Citations
7,830 Views
24 Pages

8 May 2023

Starting with European colonization, African natural resources in particular and nature in general have been coveted and exploited mainly in the interest of Euro-American industrialized countries, with China as a recent major player from Asia. Intere...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
3,625 Views
10 Pages

24 April 2024

2 Kings 20:1–11; Isaiah 38:1–22 and 2 Chronicles 32:24–26 discuss Hezekiah’s sickness and the power of healing prayer. They are called Hezekiah-Isaiah narratives since they deal not only with (a) the threats and salvation of J...

  • Article
  • Open Access
3 Citations
12,470 Views
8 Pages

22 April 2019

In the beginning was metamorphosis. This paradoxical thought, which the ancient Roman poet Ovidius and modern author Franz Kafka represented in their literary works, is visualized in Koji Yamamura’s short animation Franz Kafka’s A Country Doctor. Div...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
9,315 Views
21 Pages

25 February 2018

Camilla Battista da Varano (1458–1524), a mystic and Franciscan nun, spent most of her life in Camerino in east-central Italy. Now a saint—since 17 October 2010—she composed two autobiographical treatises across a ten-year period mid-way through a li...

  • Review
  • Open Access
31 Citations
11,794 Views
15 Pages

The Diagnostic Dilemma of Malignant Biliary Strictures

  • Robert Dorrell,
  • Swati Pawa,
  • Yi Zhou,
  • Neeraj Lalwani and
  • Rishi Pawa

The differential diagnosis for biliary strictures is broad. However, the likelihood of malignancy is high. Determining the etiology of a biliary stricture requires a comprehensive physical exam, laboratory evaluation, imaging, and ultimately tissue a...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1,486 Views
12 Pages

12 March 2025

Narrative identity, or the construction of a coherent life story to shape a sense of self, is a crucial aspect of identity formation. Narrative identity is impacted by the prevailing cultural narratives during the period of adolescence. This article,...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
10,047 Views
31 Pages

21 September 2018

The interpretation of early Buddha images with a crown has long been a source of debate. Many scholars have concluded that the iconography of the crown is intended to denote Śākyamuni as a cakravartin or universal Buddha. A few have suggested it repr...

  • Article
  • Open Access
4 Citations
4,184 Views
17 Pages

Automatic Restoration of Dunhuang Murals and Process Visualization Method Based on Deep Learning

  • Miao Jia,
  • Jie Hu,
  • Zhongliang Yang,
  • Weijie Liu,
  • Jin Qi and
  • Bin Chen

30 January 2025

Dunhuang murals are an important part of human cultural heritage with extraordinary literary and historical value. However, with the influences of time and the environment, many murals have suffered large defects and require complete reconstructions...

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