Compiling the work of writers from Canada, England, Iran, New Zealand, the Philippines, Scotland, Singapore, South Africa, and the United States, this poetry anthology is a celebration of the diversity and possibility of new poetry in English. Ranging in age from early 20s to late 60s, each poet offers a different approach to language and form. Poetry lovers and academics will appreciate the rich and varied content included here.
Compiling the work of writers from Canada, England, Iran, New Zealand, the Philippines, Scotland, Singapore, South Africa, and the United States, this...
Studienarbeit aus dem Jahr 2010 im Fachbereich BWL - Rechnungswesen, Bilanzierung, Steuern, Note: 1,3, Fachhochschule Hof (Wirtschaftswissenschaften), Veranstaltung: Handelsrechtliche Rechnungslegung, Sprache: Deutsch, Abstract: Wie die funktionale Wahrung zu bestimmen, bzw. wie bei einem Wechsel jener zu verfahren ist, stellt den fokussierten Bestandteil, und somit sowohl Protagonist als auch Antagonist dieser Arbeit dar. Die zunehmende Internationalisierung der Kapital- und Gutermarkte hat dazu gefuhrt, dass immer mehr Unternehmen vom Inland aus Geschafte in fremden Wahrungen abschlieen...
Studienarbeit aus dem Jahr 2010 im Fachbereich BWL - Rechnungswesen, Bilanzierung, Steuern, Note: 1,3, Fachhochschule Hof (Wirtschaftswissenschaften),...
1994 symbolised the triumphal defeat of almost three and a half centuries of racial separation since the Dutch East India Company planted a bitter almond hedge to keep indigenous people out of 'their' Cape outpost in 1659. But for the majority of people in the world's most unequal society, the taste of bitter almonds linger as their exclusion from a dignified life remain the rule. In the year of South Africa's troubled coming-of-age, veteran investigative journalist Michael Schmidt brings to bear 21 years of his scribbled field notes to weave a tapestry of the view from below: here in the...
1994 symbolised the triumphal defeat of almost three and a half centuries of racial separation since the Dutch East India Company planted a bitter alm...
The September-October 2018 issue. The last published poems of the late Matthew Sweeney. A translation of one of the most famous Ethiopian oral poems. John Ash's first published poem in over a decade. New poems by Sophie Hannah, Claudine Toutoungi and Drew Milne. Essay by Vahni Capildeo: `Earwormed by a Keynote, with Added Ghosts'. With translations from the Arabic, Ethiopian, German, Greek, Indian and Spanish. New to PN Review this issue: Clare Jones, Bedilu Wakjira, Sam Trainor and Susan de Sola. And more...
The September-October 2018 issue. The last published poems of the late Matthew Sweeney. A translation of one of the most famous Ethiopian oral poems. ...
The January-February 2019 issue. New poems by Les Murray and Rebecca Watts. Vahni Capildeo on making multivocal performative texts. Michael Powell discusses Drawing in Drag, the first comic book published by Chetham's Library. Sasha Dugdale discusses how we see the world in her essay `On Vision'. With translations from the Arabic, French, German, and Russian. New to PN Review this issue: Yehunda Amichai, Hal Coase, Nina Iskrenko & Jonathan Catherall. And more...
The January-February 2019 issue. New poems by Les Murray and Rebecca Watts. Vahni Capildeo on making multivocal performative texts. Michael Powell dis...
The November-December 2018 issue. Sean O'Brien looks at Robert Graves, Myth and European War. Henry King defends Toby Martinez de las Rivas. New poems by Ange Mlinko. 'Borders & Crossings' looks at migration and martyrdom. Rebecca Hurst's first major poem 'Mapping the Woods'. With translations from the French and Latin. New to PN Review this issue: Lisa Kelly, Peter Adair, Suzannah V. Evans & Liz Lefroy. And more...
The November-December 2018 issue. Sean O'Brien looks at Robert Graves, Myth and European War. Henry King defends Toby Martinez de las Rivas. New poems...
The May-June 2019 issue. Memoirs of Brodsky in Leningrad and Ginsberg in Prague; News: Colombia arrests man for trafficking in poetry; Andy Croft deconstructs the poetry industry; East meets West in `A New Divan'; Vahni Capildeo considers shipwrecks; New poetry from Lisa Kelly, Sean O'Brien, Joe Carrick-Varty and others; New to PN Review this issue: Charles Bernstein, Jennifer Edgecombe, Michael Farrell and Samira Negrouche; and more...
The May-June 2019 issue. Memoirs of Brodsky in Leningrad and Ginsberg in Prague; News: Colombia arrests man for trafficking in poetry; Andy Croft deco...
The July-August 2019 issue. Essay on readership by renowned French critic and literary theorist Helene Cixoux; Sarah Rothenberg delivers an intimate Musical Tribute to John Ashbery; Micheal McCann in conversation with American poet and memoirist Mark Doty; Major sequence of poems by leading South African poet Carola Luther; A meditation on Adrienne Rich's radical feminist poem `Diving into the Wreck' by Vahni Capildeo; Featuring poems translated from the Spanish and Czech; New to PN Review this issue: Michael Prior, Nell Prince, Stav Poleg and Lynne Hjelmgaard; and more...
The July-August 2019 issue. Essay on readership by renowned French critic and literary theorist Helene Cixoux; Sarah Rothenberg delivers an intimate M...
The November-December 2019 issue The celebratory 250th issue of PN Review Sinead Morrissey's StAnza lecture exploring Denise Riley's 'A Part Song' Elaine Feinstein's last poems Richard Price creates a compelling sequence of Inuit tales New poems by Sujata Bhatt, Jane Yeh, Angela Leighton, and Parwana Fayyaz, winner of the 2019 Forward Prize for Best Poem New to PN Review this issue: Yu Xiuhua, Petrus Borel, David Hackbridge Johnson, and Bernhard Fieldsend and more...
The November-December 2019 issue The celebratory 250th issue of PN Review Sinead Morrissey's StAnza lecture exploring Denise Riley's 'A Part Song' ...