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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.
141

Narrative Form and Mediaeval Continuity In The Percy Folio Manuscript: A Study Of Selected Poems

St. Clair-Kendall, S. G. (Stella Gwendolen) January 1988 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy(PhD) / Revised September, 2007 / This study examines the continuity of mediaeval literary tradition in selected rhymed narrative verse. These verses were composed for entertainment at various times prior to 1648. At or shortly before this date, they were collected into The Percy Folio: BL. Add. MS. 27,879. Selected texts with an Historical or Romance topic are examined from two points of view: modification of source material and modification of traditional narrative stylistic structure. First, an early historical poem is analysed to establish a possible paradigm of the conventions governing the mediaeval manipulation of fact or source material into a pleasing narrative. Other texts are compared with the result of this analysis and it is found that twenty paradigmatic items appear to summarize early convention as their presence in other poems is consistent — no text agreeing with less than twelve. The second step is the presentation of the results of an analysis of some fifty mediaeval Romances. This was undertaken in order to delineate clearly selected motifemic formulae inherent in the composition of these popular narratives. It is shown that these motifemes, found in the Romances, are also present in the historical texts of The Percy Folio. The findings, derived from both strands of investigation, are that mediaeval continuity exists in the texts studied. The factors which actually comprise this ‘mediaeval continuity’ are isolated: it is then seen that rather than discard tradition as society grew further and further from the early circumstances that gave rise to it, later poets have chosen to contrive modifications designed to fit new requirements as they arise. Such modifications, however, are always within the established conventional framework. In short, no text examined failed to echo tradition, and mediaeval continuity is an important feature of the popular rhymed narrative in 1648 and The Percy Folio.
142

Narrative Form and Mediaeval Continuity In The Percy Folio Manuscript: A Study Of Selected Poems

St. Clair-Kendall, S. G. (Stella Gwendolen) January 1988 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy(PhD) / Revised September, 2007 / This study examines the continuity of mediaeval literary tradition in selected rhymed narrative verse. These verses were composed for entertainment at various times prior to 1648. At or shortly before this date, they were collected into The Percy Folio: BL. Add. MS. 27,879. Selected texts with an Historical or Romance topic are examined from two points of view: modification of source material and modification of traditional narrative stylistic structure. First, an early historical poem is analysed to establish a possible paradigm of the conventions governing the mediaeval manipulation of fact or source material into a pleasing narrative. Other texts are compared with the result of this analysis and it is found that twenty paradigmatic items appear to summarize early convention as their presence in other poems is consistent — no text agreeing with less than twelve. The second step is the presentation of the results of an analysis of some fifty mediaeval Romances. This was undertaken in order to delineate clearly selected motifemic formulae inherent in the composition of these popular narratives. It is shown that these motifemes, found in the Romances, are also present in the historical texts of The Percy Folio. The findings, derived from both strands of investigation, are that mediaeval continuity exists in the texts studied. The factors which actually comprise this ‘mediaeval continuity’ are isolated: it is then seen that rather than discard tradition as society grew further and further from the early circumstances that gave rise to it, later poets have chosen to contrive modifications designed to fit new requirements as they arise. Such modifications, however, are always within the established conventional framework. In short, no text examined failed to echo tradition, and mediaeval continuity is an important feature of the popular rhymed narrative in 1648 and The Percy Folio.
143

Fäderneslandets rätta beskrivning : mötet mellan antikvarisk forskning och ekonomisk nyttokult i 1700-talets Sverige /

Legnér, Mattias, January 2004 (has links)
Diss. Stockholm : Univ., 2004.
144

Een seer bequaem middel : onderwijs en kerk onder de zeventiende-eeuwse VOC /

Koolen, Gijsbertus Marius Josef Maria, January 1993 (has links)
Proefschrift--Godgeleerdheid--Nijmegen--Katholieke Universiteit, 1993. / Résumés en anglais et en allemand.
145

Reconstructions of past climates from documentary and natural sources in Finland since the 18th century

Holopainen, Jari. January 2006 (has links)
Diss. -- Helsingin yliopisto. / Myös paperimuodossa (ISBN 952-10-2610-3).
146

St Petersburg och Finland : migration och influens, 1703-1917 /

Engman, Max, January 1983 (has links)
Th.--Hist.--Helsinki, 1983. / Résumé en anglais. Bibliogr. pp. 410-437.
147

Poetry of moral reflection at the turn of the sixteenth century

Wilkes, Gerald Alfred January 1955 (has links)
No description available.
148

Thomas Nashe's literary exploitation of festive wit in its social context

Hutson, Lorna January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
149

La obra de Don Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora como mecanismo de emancipación intelectual

Seguel, Arturo January 2011 (has links)
La siguiente investigación tiene como objeto el estudio de la figura de Don Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora y su obra. Esta última es la que queremos abordar desde la perspectiva de una emancipación intelectual. Este afán responde al interés por indagar en torno a la figura de un sujeto criollo dados los problemas que se suscitan durante la colonia. Identificamos este periodo como fundamental para el desarrollo de las letras y el conocimiento en general y estandarte de ello es Don Carlos. En el seno de una sociedad criolla, Sigüenza realiza un importante aporte a la comunidad novohispana mediante su el desarrollo de sus obras e investigaciones.
150

The just figure shape, harmony and proportion in a selection of Andrew Marvell's lyrics

Gardner, Corinna January 1994 (has links)
The phrase "the just Figure" - a quotation from Upon Appleton House - is the central theme of this thesis as it aptly describes Marvell's repeated use of shape, harmony and proportion to suggest morality and virtue. The poet's concern with geometrical imagery is conveyed by the word "figure", which also is another term for a metaphor or conceit. The word "just" suggests not only moral appropriateness, but also mathematical exactness or fit. The thesis consists of five chapters, each dealing with an aspect of the imagery of shape and form which pervades so many of Marvell's lyrics. The first chapter, "Moral Geometry", deals with the way in which Marvell uses the imagery of lines, angles and curves. In some poems the lines are curved, as in Upon the Hill and Grove at Bill-borrow, where the graceful downward curved line of the hill conveys Fairfacian humility. Symmetry and circularity are discussed in the second chapter. The poet uses the perfect shape of the circle to depict objects which convey a moral significance. Similarly, several of the lyrics are themselves quasi-circular with their closing lines echoing their openings. Chapter Three deals with liquid spheres. Marvell explores the nature, shape and texture of tears in poems such as Eyes and Tears and Mourning; and in On a Drop of Dew uses the shape of the dew drop to suggest the perfection of the heavenly realm from which it has been parted. In several of the lyrics, Marvell places a frame around his poems to create an enclosed world in which his poetic creations exist. These enclosed, or framed, worlds are discussed in Chapter Four. The final chapter, "Beyond The Frame", describes how some of the lyrics suggest a move from the world within to the world beyond the frame of the poem.This can either be a movement from confinement to release, or from the seen world to worlds unseen. Shape, harmony and proportion are the qualities which Marvell uses to convey morality and humility and a vision of the world based on what is, in the various senses of the word, "just".

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