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1rjohara
I have a typical scholar's problem: a fragmentary recollection of the title of a paper that I can't now locate.
The title began with a Latin phrase "Iter (something)" and it meant "The journey to where we are now," perhaps in the sense of time and/or location. The paper was part of a volume of papers published (I think) in the 1960s or 1970s on literary or historical narrative and narration (i.e., journeys to where we are now).
Is this an idiomatic Latin phrase that anyone recognizes? Can anyone suggest an idiomatic completion of the phrase that might give me enough to search on?
Many thanks.
The title began with a Latin phrase "Iter (something)" and it meant "The journey to where we are now," perhaps in the sense of time and/or location. The paper was part of a volume of papers published (I think) in the 1960s or 1970s on literary or historical narrative and narration (i.e., journeys to where we are now).
Is this an idiomatic Latin phrase that anyone recognizes? Can anyone suggest an idiomatic completion of the phrase that might give me enough to search on?
Many thanks.
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