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Issue 2

  • Sergio Givone / Criticism

    The Metaphysics of the Plague – Guilt and Destiny

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  • Serena Baldini & David Marini / Criticism

    Counseling e il nuovo status del docente: Esperienze nell’insegnamento dell’italiano in classi monolingui anglofone

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  • Elvira Lato / Creativity

    La Fontana Maggiore | Piero della Francesca | Rimpianto

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  • Thomas Jeannot / Criticism

    Gadamer, Dewey and Marx: Work and Interpretation

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  • Patrick West / Criticism

    Lying Idiots: Reality Television & Lie to Me

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  • Radu R. Serban / Creativity

    The Question of the Lion in Landscape Art

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  • Stuart Friebert / Creativity

    A Wrestler Named Plato | Beast of Kings | Flying Wedding Rings | Sea Squirt | Shadow

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  • Erik Schmidt & Michael Pringle / Criticism

    Re-Thinking Education: Philosophy and Literature in an Interdisciplinary Perspective: Ethics and Shakespeare

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La Fontana Maggiore | Piero della Francesca | Rimpianto

Creativity

Elvira Lato

Issue 2 (Summer 2013)

Si secca d’estate l’erba così verde a primavera diviene quasi una stoppa. Ce ne stiamo dimenticando sempre avidi di prati verdeggianti di fiori variopinti spazi smaglianti. E’ bastata una tenera piantina i fiori ancora in …

Lying Idiots: Reality Television & Lie to Me

Criticism

Patrick WestLeave a Comment

Issue 2 (Summer 2013)

“the one thing they are not is reality” (1) Reg Grundy, September 20, 2010 TV’s appeal was so decimated by the late 1990s, under the blitzkrieg of competition from a host of new media forms, …

A Wrestler Named Plato | Beast of Kings | Flying Wedding Rings | Sea Squirt | Shadow

Creativity

Stuart Friebert

Issue 2 (Summer 2013)

A WRESTLER NAMED PLATO Not the bum we hollered at on the south side of Chicago, who’d twist the other bum’s head between the ropes till he miraculously extricated himself and stomped on the first …

The Question of the Lion in Landscape Art

Creativity

Radu R. Serban

Issue 2 (Summer 2013)

From the volume The Trojans (1985) THE QUESTION OF THE LION IN LANDSCAPE ART A landscape (a French master would have called it two centuries ago). That’s why I can’t paint it (I don’t even want …

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Current Issue

  • ROBERTO BALÒ | continuamente a tratti | impressione del nulla | i giorni sono numeri
  • MARK BIBBINS | Cinque poesie
  • CARLO CUPPINI | Il Sarago
  • STUART FRIEBERT | Then Dog Walked
  • GABRIELA DRAGNEA HORVATH | Ecology and Thought: Virus Sapiens and Homo Stultus
  • SONNET MONDAL | Around my Karma | Proshitabhartruka | Virahotkanthita
  • ERIC NICHOLSON | The Porcellino’s Melan-Comic Lament/Il Lamento malin-comico del Porcellino
  • GLEN PHILLIPS | Rescue Mission
  • GLEN PHILLIPS | Times’ All-Seeing Eye
  • ROCCO RORANDELLI | Remote Learning

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About the journal

The very term humanism has come to signify a number of concepts, from the cultural trend initiated in 14th century Italy focused on the study of humanities to any system of thought or any initiatives and actions that promote human interests and human values.  The foundation of any form of humanism is the understanding of human nature.

Today, we are witnessing and participating in the most spectacular achievements of science, technology and exploration that are impacting the way humans relate to nature, to other humans and to themselves. And yet these rapid transformations are not free of tensions and counter-tendencies. Expeditions to Mars take place alongside flat-earth conferences and the same human impulse that promotes progress and welfare is also responsible for climate change and the depredation of natural resources and habitats. We live in a paradoxical moment in which technological advancement is shadowed by new forms of illiteracy, and the promise of an interconnected peaceful global community still leads to new wars, new divisions and new forms of intolerance. 

Voyages wishes to capture the reactions of intellectuals and artists to these tensions and opposing tendencies by providing a forum for responses and reflections on contemporary human endeavors in all of their diversity, complex manifestations and disquieting aspects.

ISSN 2283-6578

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Voyages: The Journal of Contemporary Humanism ( ISSN 2283-6578)

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