Збережено в:
| Автор: | |
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| Формат: | Recurso digital |
| Мова: | Англійська |
| Опубліковано: |
Zenodo
2026
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| Предмети: | |
| Онлайн доступ: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19310014 |
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Зміст:
- <p>Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792–1822), a towering figure of English Romanticism, crafted a poetic universe anchored in elemental natural imagery—wind, sky, and sea—infused with the lyrical intensity and cosmic sensibility forged during his Mediterranean sojourn. Two canonical Cypriot poets, Vasilis Michaelides (1849–1917), the national bard of Cyprus, and Kyriakos Charalambides (1940–), the preeminent contemporary voice of Cypriot lyric poetry, share an unwavering poetic preoccupation with the same Mediterranean elements: the wind that traverses the island's plains and coastal cliffs, the insular landscape rooted in the sea's embrace, and the waves that shape both the physical terrain and the poetic imagination. Separated by centuries, linguistic barriers, and cultural contexts, their works nonetheless converge in a shared reverence for the natural world, creating an unspoken dialogue across time and space.</p> <p>This study undertakes a rigorous comparative textual analysis of Shelley, Michaelides, and Charalambides, centering exclusively on their artistic deployment of natural imagery—wind, island, and sea—alongside their poetic language, formal structures, rhythmic cadences, and sensory evocation of the Mediterranean landscape. It deliberately eschews discussions of politics, historical narratives, religious doctrine, or national identity, adhering strictly to a formalist and aesthetic framework that prioritizes the art of poetry itself. The study unfolds in seven interconnected sections: an introductory framing of the Mediterranean as a transnational poetic space; dedicated analyses of Shelley's wind and sea poetics, Michaelides' island-centered lyricism, and Charalambides' meditations on memory and the sea; a comparative synthesis of their natural imagery; an examination of their linguistic and formal innovations; and a concluding reflection on the enduring cross-temporal dialogue between these three poets. This work contributes to the field of Mediterranean comparative poetics by bridging Anglo-Romantic and Cypriot literary traditions, highlighting the universal resonance of elemental natural imagery in lyric poetry.</p>