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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.
151

The moment of criticism : the critical culture of Montersquieu, Voltaire and Diderot / Patrick James Bishop.

Bishop, Patrick James, 1958- January 1995 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 202-211. / iii, 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 Politics, 1995
152

Instrumentarium and instrumentation in the north German baroque opera

McCredie, Andrew D. January 1964 (has links)
The systematic study of orchestral practice and instrumentation in the German Baroque Opera has until now been assigned a relatively insignificant place in biographies of specific composers, or in historical studies of particular centres. Many of these works, while presenting a valuable compilation of the instrumental methode of a particular composer, or of the adoption of his style to meet the conditions of performance which prevailed from one centre to another, do not however supply their readers with a chronogically exhaustive investigation of the role of the orchestra in the baroque theatre, nor of the contribution made by theatre orchestration of the general artistic development of orchestral music as a whole.
153

Blackedout : the representation of Aboriginal people in Australian painting 1850-1900

Macneil, Roderick Peter January 1999 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis examines the representation of Aboriginal people in Australian painting between 1850 and 1900. In particular, the thesis discusses and seeks to account for the decline in the frequency with which Aboriginal people were represented in mainstream academic art in the decades preceding Australia’s Federation in 1901. In addition, this thesis investigates the ways in which a visual discourse of Aboriginality was realised in mid- and late nineteenth-century Australian painting. / The figures of Aboriginal people formed a significant presence in Australian painting from the moment of first contact in the late eighteenth century until well into the nineteenth century. I argue that in paintings of the Australian landscape, as well as in portraiture and figure studies produced in the second half of the nineteenth century, images of Aboriginal people were used to signify the primordial difference of the antipodean landscape. In these paintings, Aboriginality emerged as a motif of Australia’s precolonial past: a timeless, arcadian realm that preceded European colonisation, and in which Aboriginal people enjoyed uncontested possession of the Australian landscape. This uncolonised landscape represented the antithesis of colonial civilisation, both spatially and temporally distinct from the colonial nation. / I argue that prior to Federation in 1901, Australian national identity was dependent upon the recognition and construction of a ‘difference’ that was seen to be implicit within the Australian landscape itself. This sense of difference derived from the settlers’ perception of the Australian environment, and became embodied in those objects which appeared most ‘different’ from settlers’ notion of the familiar. Colonial artists drew upon an iconography based upon this recognition of difference to signify the geographical identity of the landscape which they painted. Aboriginal people were central to these icons of ‘Australian-ness’. Further, the association of Aboriginal people with a precolonial Australia served to rationalise acts of colonial dispossession. / Representations of Aboriginal people dressed in a traditional manner, as well as those in which they are portrayed in European costume as ‘white but not quite’, underwrote colonial assertions of Aboriginal ‘primitiveness’ and precluded Aboriginal participation in the foundation of the Australian nation. The strengthening nationalist movement of the 1880s and 1890s meant that a new iconography was needed, one in which the triumph of the white settler culture over indigenous cultures could be celebrated. As a result, Aboriginal people began to disappear from the canvases of Australian artists, replaced by ‘white Aborigines’, who symbolised a new depth in the relationship between setter-Australia and the landscape itself. As well and more broadly, they were replaced by the image of the white frontiersman, the leitmotif of settler culture. This exclusion of Aboriginal people from the conceptualisation of the Australian nation reflects not only their ‘disenfranchisement’ within Australian society, but more significantly reveals the effectiveness with which a visual discourse of ‘Australia’ painted Aboriginal people out of existence.
154

Contribution a l'histoire de la Faculté de médecine de Paris sous le décant de Bourru de 1787 a 1792 ...

Jarty, Louis. January 1919 (has links)
These - Paris, 1919, no. 106. / "Bibliographie génerale": [1] p. at end.
155

Religious and moral concepts in the eighteenth-century German novel of sensibility : from Christian Fürchtegott Gellert's 'Leben der schwedischen Gräfin von G+' to the end of the 1770s

Polak, Victoria January 1990 (has links)
In my introduction I analyse the state of research in my subject. No detailed study of the subject has been conducted in recent years, hence there exists no work which takes account of recent conclusions in the examination of Sensibility in its entirety. I, therefore, consider it important to trace the origins of a movement in European culture. I draw attention to possible influences from philosophy and psychology which have tended to be neglected in favour of too exclusive emphasis on Empfindsamkeit as secularised Pietism. The main part of my thesis is devoted to detailed interpretation of five novels covering a period 1747 to 1776. This study yields various conclusions. In the novel as a genre, as in theoretical works on Empfindsamkeit, there is no polarity between the Enlightenment and Sensibility. Each of the novelists analysed is concerned to proclaim the necessity of achieving a balance between reason and emotion. In the novels of Gellert and La Roche this is explicitly stated in the form of moral instruction to the reader, while the fate of the heroes of Goethe and Miller perhaps suggests indirectly that such an equilibrium might be desirable. In particular the earlier authors I study equate moderation in feeling with virtue. Here these novelists advocate only feeling in the cause of virtue, while at the same time arguing that those who are capable of "true feeling" are by definition virtuous. In the sphere of religion, all novelists show a tendency to regard Christianity as a matter of emotion on the one hand and of practical ethics on the other. While there was a shift in emphasis from Tugendempfindsamkeit to the cultivation of feeling for its own sake, perceptions of the nature of religions and virtue remained constant.
156

George Robert Fitzgerald (1748?-1786) and the nature of eighteenth-century celebrity culture : an analysis of the language, character and representation of late eighteenth-century celebrity drawn from literary sources

Cornish, Yvonne January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
157

The operation of lay patronage in the Church of Scotland from the Act of 1712 until 1746 : with particular reference to the Presbyteries of Duns, Edinburgh and Brechin

Whitley, Laurence Arthur Brown January 1994 (has links)
Although lay patronage was abolished in 1690, the study emphasises the importance of linking that Act with the one restoring it in 1712, since there was a difference between the landed interest and the Church in their perception of both pieces of legislation. This divergence, together with the 1690 Act's placement of the heritor class into the process of ministerial election, and the vexations caused by the Abjuration Oath, combined to create the complications which undermined the Church's ability to throw off patronage. The study questions the idea that few patronage disputes arose in the first period after the Act, and goes on to examine how the intensification of Squadrone/Argathelian rivalry in the post-Union scramble for influence drew church vacancy matters inexorably into the web of politics. The most successful manipulators of patronage were Lord Ilay and Lord Milton, and a general comparison is made between their administration and that of the Marquis of Tweeddale. Skilful management of the Church's senior courts, along with a judicious preferment of ministerial loyalists, made concerted opposition to even the worst excesses of patronage, overwhelmingly difficult. The study however draws attention to one period, between 1734 and 1736, when forces antipathetic to the abuses of patronage appeared to achieve an effective unity. Finally, the study looks beyond the influence of simple party politics, to examine what local factors may have impinged upon settlements by presentation, and to this end examines the peculiar circumstances which obtained in the Presbyteries of Edinburgh, Duns and Brechin.
158

Manuscript recipe collections and elite domestic medicine in eighteenth century England

Allen, Katherine June January 2015 (has links)
Collecting recipes was an established tradition that continued in elite English households throughout the eighteenth century. This thesis is on medical recipes and advice, and it addresses the evolution of recipe collecting from the seventeenth century and throughout the eighteenth century. It investigates elite domestic medicine within a cultural history of medicine framework and uses social and material history approaches to reveal why elites continued to collect medical recipes, given the commercialisation of medicine. This thesis contends that the meaning of domestic medicine must be understood within a wider context of elite healthcare in order to appreciate how the recipe collecting tradition evolved alongside cultural shifts, and shifts within the medical economy. My re-appraisal of the meaning of domestic medicine gives elite healthcare a clearer role within the narrative of the social history of medicine. Elite healthcare was about choice. Wealthy individuals had economic agency in consumerism, and recipe compilers interacted with new sources of information and products; recipe books are evidence of this consumer engagement. In addition to being household objects, recipe books had cultural significance as heirlooms, and as objects of literacy, authority, and creativity. A crucial reason for the continuation of the recipe collecting tradition was due to its continued engagement with cultural attitudes towards social obligation, knowledge exchange, taste, and sociability as an intellectual pursuit. Positioning the household as an important space of creativity, experiment, and innovation, this thesis reinforces domestic medicine as an important part of the interconnected histories of science and medicine. This thesis moreover contributes to the social history of eighteenth-century England by demonstrating the central role domestic medicine had in elite healthcare, and reveals the elite reception of the commercialisation of medicine from a consumer perspective through an investigation of personal records of intellectual pastimes and patient experiences.
159

Pope's poetic legacy, 1744-1830

Cox, Octavia January 2015 (has links)
Jerome McGann observes that 'Deceptive apparitions haunt romantic writing'. This thesis investigates one such haunting apparition; it analyses the ways in which selected eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century poets engage with the poetry of Alexander Pope. The received view of "Romantic" anti-Popeanism is expressed in comments such as that of William Hazlitt's 'I do not think there is any point of sympathy between Pope and the Lake School: on the contrary, I know there is an antipathy between them'. There is plenty of evidence to suggest some Romantic writers had an aversion to the previous literary age. In a letter to his brother and sister-in-law in March 1819, for example, Keats reviews a play by mocking that it 'was bad even in comparison with ... the Augustan age'. Pope had been the pre-eminent figure of Augustan poetry. Hence, the argument runs, Pope was rejected wholesale by Romantic poets. Such an understanding of literary history is, however, too dogmatic. Rather than accepting the view that the progression from Pope's era to the Romantic period involved a sudden pivot in taste, I explore how Popean poetic principles filtered into the development of his successors' literary aesthetics and ideas about poetry. The central questions I ask are how, and in what ways, Pope's successors used Pope's poetry to formulate their own poetic visions. I address these questions in four main chapters. In the first, I analyse Joseph Warton's An Essay on the Writings and Genius of Pope. I show that Warton's Essay on Pope should not be taken as a denigration of Pope's poetic achievement, and suggest ways in which Pope's work permeates his, and his brother Thomas', poetry. In the second, I examine the response to Pope's Iliad, a text which prompted conflicting reactions among his successors. In particular, I appraise William Cowper's response to Pope's translation, not only as contained in his prose discussion of it, but also as revealed by his own translation. My third chapter considers ways in which Wordsworth plays with Pope's poetic legacy, and acknowledges Pope's contribution to the formulation of his own ideas of what constitutes good poetry. In the final chapter, I illustrate that even in the poetry of Keats - who, at times, vociferously rejects Pope as a mere handicraftsman - there is a sympathy in song between brother-poets. Literary criticism has often stressed the prominence of authors such as Lord Byron, Erasmus Darwin and George Crabbe in Pope's poetic reception and legacy. Yet Pope haunts other writers in subtler, but no less compelling, ways. As Samuel Taylor Coleridge observes, in Biographia Literaria, 'many ... formed ... their notions of poetry, from the writings of Mr. Pope'. What I try to give colour to here are some of the ways in which subsequent 'notions of poetry' were 'formed' from 'the writings of Mr. Pope'.
160

Marquesa de Alorna, tradutora de Horácio : estudo e comentário da Arte poética /

Borges, Joana Junqueira. January 2018 (has links)
Orientador: Brunno Vinicius Gonçalves Vieira / Banca: Vanda Anastácio / Banca: Heloísa Maria Moraes Moreira Penna / Banca: Maria Celeste Consolin Dezotti / Banca: Giovanna Longo / Resumo: Com a intenção de dar continuidade à pesquisa na área de História da Tradução, mais especificamente ao resgate de textos do legado clássico traduzidos em Língua Portuguesa em períodos anteriores e por autores pouco explorados, o presente trabalho pretende estudar e editar, à luz do contexto de recepção e produção, a tradução de D. Leonor de Almeida (1750-1839), a quarta Marquesa de Alorna, para a Arte poética de Horácio, que foi publicada em 1812, em Londres. Essa poeta, "quase" canônica, tem uma biografia que despertou o interesse dos críticos literários desde o século XIX até os dias de hoje; frequentemente os acontecimentos de sua vida entrelaçam-se com a história de Portugal; e desperta o interesse dos historiadores a sua presença nos círculos literários de sua época. Além disso, a investigação histórica do contexto de produção dessa tradução permitiu o contato com textos que facilitaram o estudo de possibilidades pelas quais os poetas e tradutores do período entendiam a tradução e, por consequência, permite verificar como essas questões se materializam na poética e na tradução de D. Leonor. Para além de breve estudo histórico e tradutório, pretende-se aqui apresentar a edição da tradução da Arte poética a partir do manuscrito autógrafo, encontrado no Arquivo Nacional da Torre do Tombo, em Lisboa. / Abstract: Proceeding the research of Translation History, in particular the recovery of classic legacy texts translated to Portuguese in previous ages and by less known writers, the actual work intends to study and to edit, in connection to accepting and producing, the translation of D. Leonor de Almeida (1750-1839), the fourth Marchioness of Alorna, for the Poetic Art of Horace, published in London in 1812. This poet, almost "canonical", has a biography that increased the interest of literary critics from the nineteenth century to the present day; often the events of her life intertwine with the history of Portugal; and increases the interest of historians to her presence in literary circles of her time. Furthermore, the historical investigation in connection to the creation of this translation allowed the contact with texts that made easier to study the possibilities that the poets and translators in that time understood the translation and, consequently, allows us to check how these questions materialize the poetics and translation of D. Leonor. In addition to a brief historical and translation study, we intend to present the edition of the Poetic Art translation from the manuscript, found in the National Archive of the Torre do Tombo, in Lisbon / Doutor

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