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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Constantes universelles chez Chrétien de Troyes

Lichtarge, Fernand S. January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
2

Constantes universelles chez Chrétien de Troyes

Lichtarge, Fernand S. January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
3

Saints and sinners in the works of Marie de France

MacKenzie, Francis Henri Maurice January 1963 (has links)
The problem of this thesis may be briefly stated: What was Marie de France trying to say when she wrote the Espurgatoire, the Fables and the Lais? What exactly was she trying to tell her Twelfth Century audiences and how did she wish posterity to interpret her compositions? Were her books written to entertain or to edify? Or again, did she have in mind some moral or spiritual improvement yet wish to entertain simultaneously? With a view to discovering the answers to some of these questions, the writer decided to undertake an analysis of the themes of sin and saintliness in the works of Marie de France. Some of the terms frequently used in the course of the investigation (e.g. sin, saintliness, theology) were then defined. In the Espurgatoire, it was discovered that the main theme was the theme of sin. There were few specific sins mentioned in that work, however. In the Fables, on the other hand, the sins are always specific. An attempt to classify the Fables yielded six categories which revealed Marie's wide range of interests and her deep concern with the problems of good and evil. This medieval ethic in the Fables is religious. A first group of seven Lais was examined. The content of each lay was discussed, the magic elements traced, the destiny motif and the theme of sin analysed. The aim of this procedure was to reveal the complexity of Marie de France's compositions—a complexity to be found in the various themes of the Lais, their symbols, their structure, and on occasion, their language. In a second group of five Lais, the writer pursued his analysis of the themes of sin and of saintliness. In seven out of a total of twelve Lais, the sins revealed were clearly theological. In the Prologue to the Lais, the writer tried to show that there was no real break in the meaning of lines 1-27. The connecting link seemed to him to be the idea of a process of explanation. Marie's message is that deep, important truths must be continually examined and interpreted afresh. This is hard work, but it may help to ward off sin. The poetess elaborates upon the theme of saintliness in the Espurgatoire,in those sections of the narrative dealing with the life of St. Patrick, the Terrestrial Paradise and the Celestial Paradise. She also provides further illustrations of the theme in the Lais of Fresne and Eliduc. The message in the Espurgatoire, the Fables and the Lais is an exhortation to avoid sin in this world and seek salvation in the life to come. (The Fables and the Lais are also entertainment of the highest order.) Marie's interest in religion in the Espurgatoire is obvious. The medieval ethic in the Fables is religious. The preoccupation of the poetess with the problems of good and evil in the Lais shows the same deep moral concern. Marie's audience for all three works was the same, i.e. the lay nobles, but there is evidence in her writings that she wished posterity to think about and expound her texts. Devotion, tenderness, trust and reason play an important role in Marie's concept of love, which is closely allied to that of destiny. She accepted the knightly code of morals and was not unacquainted with the casuistry of courtly love, yet she rejected "l'amour courtois," which she probably held to be contrary to Christian ethics. Marie de France's thinking is, on the whole, typically medieval. Her conclusions are almost all orthodox. She shows in the Fables, however, that although she believes in authority, she is not prepared to tolerate its abuse. Nor does Marie's orthodoxy allow her to be complacent about the problem of "la mal-mariee." The fact that she is even prepared, on occasion, to condone adultery would seem to suggest that her views on the role of women in the Twelfth Century were not quite orthodox. Were secular influences responsible for this independence of thought, or are both secular and religious influences accountable? What is certain is that Marie de France was interested in the Christian ideal of conduct, with its assumption on the one hand of human imperfection, and on the other, of an infinite perfectibility. Thus, it would be possible to look upon the combined works of Marie de France as a triptych, i.e. a set of three panels with pictures, designs or carvings, so hinged, that the two side panels may be folded over the central one. The Lais--the most complex of the three works— would be the central panel and the Fables and the Espurgatoire would be the two side panels. Such a triptych would certainly be used as an altar-piece for the greater glory of God. / Arts, Faculty of / French, Hispanic, and Italian Studies, Department of / Graduate
4

Chrétien et la théorie celtique : état présent d'études

Lotz, Kelye L. January 1992 (has links)
Since their composition during the middle to late twelfth century, Chretien's tales of Arthur and his chivalrous knights have fascinated generation upon generation of storytellers and their audiences, as well as literary critics and historians. Originally thought to have sprung from the newly civilized and thoroughly christianized courts of Marie of Champagne, daughter of Eleanor of Aquitaine, eighteenth century literary historians suggested that the legends behind the tales may have originated in the lost mythologies of Celtic Ireland and Wales. The following thesis examines the evolution of the theory of celtic origins of Chretien's Romans de la Table Ronde.
5

Namen, Antonomasien und qualifizierende Personenbezeichnungen im epischen Werk Hartmanns von Aue

Steinle, Gisela, 1947- January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
6

Chrétien et la théorie celtique : état présent d'études

Lotz, Kelye L. January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
7

Namen, Antonomasien und qualifizierende Personenbezeichnungen im epischen Werk Hartmanns von Aue

Steinle, Gisela, 1947- January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
8

Narrative reliefs of the SW and NW western corner pavilions of Angkor Wat

Roveda, Vittorio January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
9

The function of Gawan and the Gawan-section in Wolfram von Eschenbach's Parzifal : repetition with variation as a formative principle in the Middle High German epic

King, Margaret Kathleen. January 1972 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
10

Redeveloping East 12th Street : challenges and opportunities for the City of Austin / Challenges and opportunities for the City of Austin

Teinert, Audra Carin 20 August 2012 (has links)
East 12th Street was the heart of the African American community through the 1970s. After that time the African American population became less concentrated along the corridor, leaving a street in disrepair, and with continuous promises for improvements and redevelopment. However, none of the projects envisioned decades ago came to fruition along the East 12th Street corridor, but East 11th Street was able to transform into a bustling center city street. This report will examine the history of the East 12th Street corridor, the multiple efforts made at redevelopment, and what strategies may be useful going forward to encourage investment in the area, after several unsuccessful attempts. / text

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