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Agogiek in historiese perspektief met spesiale verwysing na die 18de eeuKotze, Hanneli 09 1900 (has links)
Thesis(M.Mus.) -- Stellenbosch University, 1987. / VOORWOORD
Die twintigste eeu beleef 'n besondere belangstelling in die outentieke uitvoering van ou musiek en
dit is 'n studieveld wat reeds uitgebreid nagevors is. Desondanks bestaan daar steeds baie
vraagstukke aangaande sekere uitvoeringspraktyke en styltipes en hoe ouer die musiek, hoe meer
problematies word 'n outentieke uitvoering, veral as gevolg van die groot verskille tussen die
moderne en ou instrumente, die speeltegnieke en die dikwels ontoereikende notasie.
Die teoriee wat die twintigste eeuse musici aangaande die uitvoeringspraktyke geformuleer het, is
hoofsaaklik gebaseer op ou geskrifte, verhandelinge en onderrigboeke uit die onderskeie
styltydperke. Daar bestaan baie teenstrydighede tussen hierdie teoriee, veral met betrekking tot
die musiek van die Barokperiode. Die uitvoering van musiek van die Klassieke en veral die
Romantiese periodes is minder problematies en die redes hiervoor is hoofsaaklik die volgende: Die
notasiesisteem het reeds tydens die Hoog-Klassieke tydperk tot sy huidige vorm ontwikkel. Verder
het musiekkritiek en -geskiedskrywing segert die agtiende eeu toenemend meer aandag geniet en
bestaan daar dus meer inligting aangaande uitvoeringspraktyke.
Ten spyte daarvan dat hierdie na vorsing reeds dekades gelede begin het, is daar steeds groot
onkunde daaromtrent en word daar dikwels min aandag gegee aan die outentieke uitvoering van ou
musiek. Hierdie studie is 'n paging om die navorsing wat reeds gedoen is krities te ondersoek en 'n
moontlike samevatting daarvan te gee. / Digitized at 300 dpi B/W PDF format (OCR), using ,KODAK i 1220 PLUS scanner. Digitised, Rebecca Patterson on 28 August 2013. Digitization of Music Thesis Project
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Japonifying the qin: the appropriation of Chinese qin music in Tokugawa JapanYang, Yuanzheng., 楊元錚. January 2008 (has links)
The Best PhD Thesis in the Faculties of Architexture, Arts, Business & Economics, Education, Law and Social Sciences (University of Hong Kong), Li Ka Shing Prize, 2007-2008. / published_or_final_version / Humanities / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Early Qin music: manuscript Tōkyō, Tōkyō Kokuritsu Hakubutsukan TB1393 and manuscript Hikone, Hikone-Jōhakubutsukan V633Yang, Yuanzheng., 楊元錚. January 2005 (has links)
The Best MPhil Thesis in the Faculties of Architecture, Arts, Business & Economics, Education, Law and Social Sciences (University of Hong Kong), Li Ka Shing Prize, 2003-2005. / published_or_final_version / abstract / Music / Master / Master of Philosophy
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The "equivocal spirit" of law : property, agency and the contract in the English Jacobin novelJohnson, Nancy E. (Nancy Edna), 1956- January 1995 (has links)
In the 1790s, the English Jacobin novelists became vital participants in the fiery debates over natural and civil rights. Energized by the success of the American Revolution and inspired by the calls for l'egalite, la liberte, la surete, and la propriete in France, the Jacobin authors contributed their narratives to the British campaigns for reform of parliament and extension of the franchise. In this dissertation, I argue that the Jacobin novel furnishes crucial insights into the development of a theory of juridical rights in the late eighteenth century. Working in the early modern traditions of contract theory, writers such as Thomas Holcroft, Mary Wollstonecraft and William Godwin embraced the concept of inalienable natural rights. In their novels, they identified the critical role property played in determining the individual's relationship to the law, and they celebrated the emergence of a new kind of citizen distinguished by economic independence, inalienable rights and political agency. But they also offered an important critique of contractarian thought. The Jacobins' narratives revealed the exclusion of certain segments of the population from participation in government formed by contract. Their analyses of the origins of political authority and the constitution of the legal subject render the Jacobin novel a critical component of the history of juridical rights.
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Tenants at will : the country-house ethos as a unifying motif in works that deal with both personal retreat and national expansion in early eighteenth-century English literature, 1688-1750Kenny, Virginia Christine January 1975 (has links)
211 leaves ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of English, 1976
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Music's debt : a study of poetic influence in mid-eighteenth century German instrumental musicJang, Laurie January 1988 (has links)
The aim of this study is to examine the correspondences of style, technique and aesthetic in poetry and music as it pertains to the musical thought and works of composers centered in Berlin 1740-1760. With the trend toward rational enquiry, the re-affirmation of the Aristotelian theory of imitation, and a return to the ideal of a union of the arts, 18th-century theorists and composers were once again preoccupied with the consanguinity of the "sister" arts of poetry and music. In particular, analogies were made between their materials of expression and the methods by which they achieved their ultimate goal of the imitation of human passions. The "problem" of textless music--i.e., its lack of semantic content--became a primary issue for aesthetic discussion and led to a re-evaluation of music's intrinsic qualities as a medium of expression.
Berlin composers working in mid-century were especially susceptible to such aesthetic developments. Led by writer/critics Lessing, Nicolai, and Mendelssohn, a unique literary renaissance characterizing the city was generating wide-spread critical debate on matters concerning the significance and meaning of art. Two major points of discussion among the literati were 1) that since classical times the arts of poetry and music had strayed too far apart, and 2) that music especially needed the support and cognitive power of a poetic text to remain a viable artistic medium. The consequences of these ideas on Berlin composers is immediately apparent in the development of the lied. In this new musical genre which achieved great popularity in Berlin, expression through text and music were considered synonymous as composers worked to close the gap between the two in their technique and methodry. However, the impact of these aesthetic beliefs is not as easily discernible in the instrumental music of mid-eighteenth century Berlin. While it was undisputed that musical tones in themselves contained some indeterminate expressive force, the rationalists' demand for concrete meaning in art led composers to develop and assess their music in terms of poetic criteria. An analysis of their works will illustrate that poetic structure, technique, and materials of expression assumed a primary role in the creation of their art. This study hopes to clarify the relationship between poetry and music through an examination of mid-eighteenth century Berlin's lied aesthetic, and selected instrumental works by J.J. Quantz and C.P.E. Bach composed in Berlin during this period. / Arts, Faculty of / Music, School of / Graduate
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The "equivocal spirit" of law : property, agency and the contract in the English Jacobin novelJohnson, Nancy E. (Nancy Edna), 1956- January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Evaluation of the contemporary British criticism of WordsworthOlsson, Richard Welsh. January 1950 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1950 O4 / Master of Science
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Night in eighteenth-century French libertine fiction (1730-1789)Ganofsky, Marine January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Between duty and desire : sentimental agency in British prose fiction of the later eighteenth centuryAhern, Stephen. January 1999 (has links)
This dissertation investigates the properties of sentimentality by analyzing the move in British literature from a fascination with heightened affect to a celebration of Gothic excess during the period 1768--1796. This study develops an account of sentimentality as a model of agency, theorizes the relationship of sentimental ideology to sentimental narrative form, and traces continuities between the sentimental and Gothic modes through an examination of texts that share a preoccupation with the aesthetics and ethics of sentimentalism. By examining representations of sentimental agency in prose fiction narratives by Laurence Sterne, Henry Mackenzie, Ann Radcliffe, and Matthew Lewis, this dissertation argues that sentimentalism was a contradictory cultural discourse rooted in an unstable complex of assumptions about the ontological status and political implications of social identity. Sentimental narrative dramatizes the parodic potential of a code of behavior predicated on the display of a character's virtue in sympathetic response to suffering. Intrinsic to this display is a dynamic tension between the altruistic ideals of the sentimental ethos and the aestheticized, exploitative and self-consciously theatrical mode that often marks its practice. Torn between disinterest and self-interest, between public duty and private desire, the sentimentalist is a conflicted figure whose aggressive aesthetic is increasingly shown to be at once comically bathetic and darkly menacing.
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