Making Sense of Nonsense: Readings of Children’s Poetry as Play and Creative Thinking Abstract: Nonsense and meaning are not necessarily conflicting concepts, but can be conceived of as a hendiadys, that is, not opposites, the one or the other, but as one and the other. The idea that meaning and nonsense are related and coexist is a premise for this article, which describes different structures of meaning in the nonsense poetry of Birgitte Krogsbøll and Kamilla Wichmann’s picture book Funkelgnister: Rim, råb og remser (2015, Glittersparks: Rhymes, Roars and Rigmaroles). By linking our analysis of Funkelgnister to Johan Huizinga’s theory of play as a prerequisite for culture, we reveal how the specific structures and logics of the poems gene...
The presentation sheds light on the nonsense techniques used in Lennart Hellsing’s Sjörövarbok (1965...
The essay starts out from a close-reading analysis of Lewis Carroll‘s Victorian fairytale fantasies ...
This paper contributes to challenging ‘academic tribes and territories’ (Becher 2001) and to promoti...
Making Sense of Nonsense: Readings of Children’s Poetry as Play and Creative Thinking Abstract: N...
Nonsense and meaning are not necessarily conflicting concepts, but can be conceived of as a hendiady...
Literary nonsense is often relegated to the nursery. I suggest that much can be gained from consider...
This article examines visual and verbal humour in two contemporary Norwegian poetry picturebooks for...
Humour in Two Contemporary Norwegian Poetry Picturebooks: Pling i bollen and 123 for barske barn ...
This thesis interrogates the common assumption that nonsense literature makes “no sense.” Building o...
The article analyses and sheds light on the nonsense techniques used in Lennart Hellsing’s Sjörövarb...
In this thesis I have addressed some of the problems that have arisen in critical approaches to the ...
The article analyses and sheds light on the nonsense techniques used in Lennart Hellsing’s Sjörövarb...
Transformative experiences are intellectually and emotionally cohesive experiences that shift how pe...
Johan Alfredsson, Department of Literature, History of Ideas, and Religion, University of Gothenburg...
The author examines the work of the English artist and poet Edward Lear, specifically his nonsense p...
The presentation sheds light on the nonsense techniques used in Lennart Hellsing’s Sjörövarbok (1965...
The essay starts out from a close-reading analysis of Lewis Carroll‘s Victorian fairytale fantasies ...
This paper contributes to challenging ‘academic tribes and territories’ (Becher 2001) and to promoti...
Making Sense of Nonsense: Readings of Children’s Poetry as Play and Creative Thinking Abstract: N...
Nonsense and meaning are not necessarily conflicting concepts, but can be conceived of as a hendiady...
Literary nonsense is often relegated to the nursery. I suggest that much can be gained from consider...
This article examines visual and verbal humour in two contemporary Norwegian poetry picturebooks for...
Humour in Two Contemporary Norwegian Poetry Picturebooks: Pling i bollen and 123 for barske barn ...
This thesis interrogates the common assumption that nonsense literature makes “no sense.” Building o...
The article analyses and sheds light on the nonsense techniques used in Lennart Hellsing’s Sjörövarb...
In this thesis I have addressed some of the problems that have arisen in critical approaches to the ...
The article analyses and sheds light on the nonsense techniques used in Lennart Hellsing’s Sjörövarb...
Transformative experiences are intellectually and emotionally cohesive experiences that shift how pe...
Johan Alfredsson, Department of Literature, History of Ideas, and Religion, University of Gothenburg...
The author examines the work of the English artist and poet Edward Lear, specifically his nonsense p...
The presentation sheds light on the nonsense techniques used in Lennart Hellsing’s Sjörövarbok (1965...
The essay starts out from a close-reading analysis of Lewis Carroll‘s Victorian fairytale fantasies ...
This paper contributes to challenging ‘academic tribes and territories’ (Becher 2001) and to promoti...