A commentary on “Ozymandias” and “Metaphors of Terror”

Historians are engaged in a constant endeavor to find patterns of meaning that could lend us some understanding of human life. Indeed, history is recurrent, and it is fascinating to see how literature can grasp this recurrence, or the universal features of our human past and our human nature, showin...

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Main Author: Margarete Magalhaes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Columbia University Libraries 2005-05-01
Series:Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL
Online Access:https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/SALT/article/view/1655
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spelling doaj-a29e4646c0c440d592dd2f4d1a50f5152020-11-25T02:31:43ZengColumbia University LibrariesStudies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL2689-193X2005-05-012110.7916/salt.v2i1.1655A commentary on “Ozymandias” and “Metaphors of Terror”Margarete MagalhaesHistorians are engaged in a constant endeavor to find patterns of meaning that could lend us some understanding of human life. Indeed, history is recurrent, and it is fascinating to see how literature can grasp this recurrence, or the universal features of our human past and our human nature, showing us how we and the events that we participate in all fit into a prototype established long, long ago. In this sense, literature merges with historiography unraveling the archetypical meanings that not only dress our past but also foretell its cyclical comebacks. Who would think that a poem, ‘Ozymandias’ (http://www.yoga.com/raw/readings/Ozymandias), published in 1818, almost two hundred years ago, would strike us now in the twenty-first century with the metaphorical predictability of the tragic events that overtook the world in the second half of 2001? https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/SALT/article/view/1655
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Margarete Magalhaes
spellingShingle Margarete Magalhaes
A commentary on “Ozymandias” and “Metaphors of Terror”
Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL
author_facet Margarete Magalhaes
author_sort Margarete Magalhaes
title A commentary on “Ozymandias” and “Metaphors of Terror”
title_short A commentary on “Ozymandias” and “Metaphors of Terror”
title_full A commentary on “Ozymandias” and “Metaphors of Terror”
title_fullStr A commentary on “Ozymandias” and “Metaphors of Terror”
title_full_unstemmed A commentary on “Ozymandias” and “Metaphors of Terror”
title_sort commentary on “ozymandias” and “metaphors of terror”
publisher Columbia University Libraries
series Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL
issn 2689-193X
publishDate 2005-05-01
description Historians are engaged in a constant endeavor to find patterns of meaning that could lend us some understanding of human life. Indeed, history is recurrent, and it is fascinating to see how literature can grasp this recurrence, or the universal features of our human past and our human nature, showing us how we and the events that we participate in all fit into a prototype established long, long ago. In this sense, literature merges with historiography unraveling the archetypical meanings that not only dress our past but also foretell its cyclical comebacks. Who would think that a poem, ‘Ozymandias’ (http://www.yoga.com/raw/readings/Ozymandias), published in 1818, almost two hundred years ago, would strike us now in the twenty-first century with the metaphorical predictability of the tragic events that overtook the world in the second half of 2001?
url https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/SALT/article/view/1655
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