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Posts tagged #Pulter

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#TACO is "just joking".
Meanwhile, thousands of people's lives are being uprooted.
#Pulter is "just joking". Meanwhile, he killed hundreds of thousands Ukrainians.

Epstein was "just joking". Meanwhile, studies show that 1:5 girls have been sexually abused.

No jokes allowed in pain.

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Is #Pulter delusional or what with this comment. "With Ukraine, we act in a surgical, careful way, you understand, right? It is not war in the full, modern sense of the word.". SMO meat grinder. #losttheplot

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What made me smile today: while discussing Hamlet, my students kept pointing out all the ways Hamlet sounds like Hester Pulter. My own tiny revolution! #Pulter #Shakespeare

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At the end of Week 4, I asked my students to express how they’re feeling using one of Hester Pulter’s favorite words. There was “splendent” and “radiant,” but the clear winner was “dunghill.” 💩 #Pulter #earlymodern #womenwriters #17c

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To Aurora [1] | Elemental Edition A poem by Hester Pulter (ca. 1605-1678) concerning the topics of Aurora, night, light, and truth. Elemental Edition, edited by Leah Knight (Brock University) and Wendy Wall (Northwestern University).

Your #Pulter poem of the day is “To Aurora [1].” To my students, it comments on the exploitation of women. The speaker sounds like a victim of trauma seeking help from an army of goddesses. And Pulter innovates by celebrating female nudity that has zero to do with male pleasure. #EarlyModern

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As you can tell, I thought my course on Pulter — my current favorite 17th c poet — would be a good chance to introduce #Pulter as a hashtag and share some of her poems that I like to teach. #PulterForAll !

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View But This Tulip (Emblem 40) | Elemental Edition A poem by Hester Pulter (ca. 1605-1678) concerning the topics of alchemy, ashes, body, and death. Elemental Edition, edited by Leah Knight (Brock University) and Wendy Wall (Northwestern University).

Hester Pulter wrote emblems without illustrations. I asked students to find or make images for “View But This Tulip.” Many prompted AI, to terrific results. We had skulls, Christian iconography, representations of alchemy, fire, big and small tulips. I recommend this assignment! #Pulter #earlymodern

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Hester Pulter, View But This Tulip Wendy Wall joins us to discuss an extraordinary poet whose works went unknown for over three hundred years. Hester Pulter brought together science, religion, poetic traditions and so much more. Her 12...

Today’s Hester Pulter nugget: a lovely 25-min podcast from 2021 that models close reading and rich discussion. “Poetry for All” featuring Wendy Wall and Pulter’s Emblem 40: “View But This Tulip.” Alchemy, resurrection, formal innovation — and more! #Pulter #EarlyModern

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Why Must I Thus Forever Be Confined | Elemental Edition A poem by Hester Pulter (ca. 1605-1678) concerning the topics of body, freedom, confinement, and cannibalism. Elemental Edition, edited by Leah Knight (Brock University) and Wendy Wall (Northwestern U...

Today my Pulter class dug into “Why Must I Thus Forever Be Confined.” The students considered that the speaker might be confined by war, illness, grief, etc. but decided that she is trapped in a society that doesn’t value writerly ambition in women. I like it. #Pulter #EarlyModern

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