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Artaud, au bout du voyageFontenay, Hervé de. January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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Antonin Artaud et la difficulte d'être.Sebag, Ginette. January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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The Eucharist as mystery : a comparison of Roman Catholic and Protestant thought as seen by Odo Casel and modern Scottish Presbyterian theologyDeLorme, Richard Holmes January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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La nourriture dans l'oeuvre romanesque de Georges Bernanos /Wong Chong, Stephen January 1991 (has links)
The presence or absence of food in the novels of Bernanos lie within a highly meaningful system of values and images. From a list of references to food, we will define the nature and role of food in Bernanos' novels. Then we shall try to bring out the symbolic system which organizes the various elements of this theme in one coherent whole. Thus we will see that food, scarce in this work, is always associated with evil, or tends to disappear in a system of images related to sin. As for food acceptable in the eyes of Bernanos, it also eventually loses its material quality by becoming metaphors of the spiritual world.
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Les voix de Vivier : langage harmonique, langage mélodique et langage imaginaire dans les dernières oeuvres de Claude VivierLevesque, Patrick January 2004 (has links)
The five last vocal works of Claude Vivier: Lonely Child, Bouchara, Prologue pour un Marco Polo, Wo bist Du Licht! and Trois airs pour un opera imaginaire have in common different stylistic characteristics. The detailed analysis of these characteristics reveals the influence of tonal music in the melodic, harmonic and formal construction of these works. The tonal character of the music is masked by total chromaticism and the presence of harmonic spectra built through frequency addition, a technique borrowed from spectral music. These five works are also related by the use of an imaginary language, characteristic of Vivier's late music, serving a dual semantic and musical function. The conclusion of this thesis will discuss the evolution of these various characteristics in the context of Claude Vivier's life and aesthetics.
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An analysis of four short stories by Lamed Shapiro /Frank, Esther. January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
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Écrire à partir de la fin : Georges Bernanos et le roman de combatOuellette, Julie. January 2005 (has links)
"Books are books, and can suffer the same fate as men. They too can be killed in battle," wrote Georges Bernanos in Francais, si vous saviez. Bernanos' work thus demands to be read through the optic of his battle against the modern spirit. If the polemical focus is clear in his political writings, criticism of his work has never fully recognized its deployment throughout his novels. It is therefore when Bernanosian fiction renounces any expression of its intention, eluding any dimension of rhetoric---when it is dramatically demobilized---that it is meant to be its most scandalous. / What is the mission of fiction in the Bernanosian project? Based on the tools of reconciled rhetoric of figures and argumentation, the aim of this work is to re-examine the Bernanosian triple paradox of "convincing of the obvious without using words those who share his beliefs" which generates the tension of his project of writing from the end; that is to say finding a language worthy of Christian truth, a language so "true" and so "transparent" that it could be capable of immediate conversion of souls. To fully understand the place of battle in Bernanosian writing, the notion of the end as a creative principle is examined through three main themes: the preludes to the end of time (eschatology), the final struggle for the end (agony) and the end results of writing (aim). / Writing from the end fundamentally implies a return to the origins. The focus of this study will be to demonstrate that the Bernanosian project, through a return to the source of spiritual authority and a re-examination of asceticism, is a central part of the vast enterprise of reappropriation of language defining French literature after the armistice. The search for this language capable not of convincing but of conquering is mainly studied through the voices the author gives his characters who are simple in heart and soul: to his heroes who are "strangers to a certain fencing with language," locked in a perpetual battle with words. The analysis of these heroes' discourse in this "slow tongue" attempts to determine the exact, though improbable, degree to which their babbling voices carry a weight of authority.
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Frederick Philip Grove and the great traditionRaudsepp, Enn January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
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La nature du double chez Artaud /Ng Pack, Jean January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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Les Cenci d'Antonin Artaud, un théậtre cruel? : suivi de Le Foyer - texte dramatique / FoyerDuval, Laurent January 2005 (has links)
The thesis is divided in two sections; the first section consists in a critical document while the second presents my own creative writing, a play intitled Le Foyer. My use of theatrical writing in Le Foyer sought to privilege certain litterary techniques and dramatic processes elaborated by Antonin Artaud (1896-1948) in his manifesto The Theatre and his Double (1938). The thesis' theoretical section explores various issues at stake in my creative writing exercise: the link between the play Les Cenci and Artaud's metaphysic is questionned. I aimed to demonstrate how Les Cenci is an improbable example of the concept of Theatre of Cruelty. I stressed the liberties the playwright has taken with his theory when putting it into practice in a first attempt to create total theatre.
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