The Philosophy of Composition Katya ChownThe Philosophy of Composition (1846) is an essay by Edgar Allan Poe. Recognized as a foundational figure of nineteenth century fiction, Poe has inspired generations of readers and writers with his craftsmanship and taste for tragedy and terror. His brief but meteoric career shaped the trajectory of American literature forever, forming a legacy without which science fiction, horror, and detective writing would surely be shells of themselves. Published
Continuing the work of publishing the excavations at the site of Ayia Irini on the Cycladic island of Keos
After escaping execution
Questioning a dominant interpretation that sees Gadamer's hermeneutics as the expression of a conservative project
Salmonella identifies microsites on the plant surface with adequate water and nutrients and can enter plant tissues through natural plant openings such as stomata and lenticels
not merely in relation to a broader Irish political and historical narrative
TV Museum takes as its subject the complex and shifting relationship between television and contemporary art
a city which experienced a very restrained pattern of witch-trials and just one execution for witchcraft between 1561 and 1652
immortality as a career after death
'Victorian demons' explores how a crisis in masculinity was represented in literary
quantitative study illuminates how newspaper practices and priorities developed
Palm oil is often criticized for its supposed effects on human health
“The Defeat of Youth” is a moving sonnet sequence on the passage of innocence to experience