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Verbal and visual language and the question of faith in the fiction of A.S. ByattSorensen, Susan D. 11 1900 (has links)
This study investigates the relation between faith in a transcendent reality and
faith in language, both verbal and visual, in the work of English novelist and critic
Antonia Byatt. Her ideal conception of communication combines the immediacy and
primal vigour of the visual with the methodical pragmatism of words. However, Byatt's
characters who exemplify this effort at double vision - in particular Stephanie Potter
Orton in the 1985 novel Still Life - find in their quests frustration and even death rather
than fulfillment.
My investigation focuses on A. S. Byatt's presentation of the way language
attempts to represent and interact with three particular areas: fundamental personal
experiences (childbirth, death, love), perceptual and aesthetic experiences (colour and
form, painting), and transcendent experiences (supernaturalism and Christian religion). I
consider all stages of her career to date - from her first novel The Shadow of the Sun
(1964) to Babel Tower (1996). Although Possession: A Romance (1990) has garnered
most of the critical attention accorded to Byatt, I argue that this novel is not generally
representative of her principles or style. A neo-Victorian romance, part parodic and part
nostalgic, combined with an academic comedy, Possession shares neither the sombre
mythological and psychological fatalism of her 1960s fiction nor the modified realism of
her middle-period fiction. Still Life and The Matisse Stories (1993) are the works that
best elucidate Byatt's major preoccupations; they intently strive to combine the most
powerful aspects of verbal and visual knowledge.
The methodological basis for this study is pluralist; it emphasizes close reading,
combined with phenomenological, biographical, and thematic criticism. As Byatt does, I
rely principally on the ideas of writers and artists rather than theorists; she cannot be
understood without specific reference to George Eliot, Donne, Forster, Murdoch, Van
Gogh, and Matisse (among others).
Byatt's quest for truth and transcendent meaning and her investigation of the
trustworthiness of words have undergone recent changes; she seems more sharply aware
of the limitations of language and the unattainability of absolute truth. Her writings in the
1990s about paintings and colour emphasize their intrinsic value rather than their ability
either to revitalize the word or suggest the numinous.
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The new writers in occupied Shanghai, 1941-1945Chen, Yi-Chen 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis is focused on the new writers who appeared in Shanghai during the
Japanese Occupation between December 1941 and August 1945. The rise of these new
writers to fame and their subsequent disappearance from the literary scene were
consistent with the fall and liberation o f Shanghai. In the meantime, their appearance and
disappearance were parallel with the success and decline of magazines published in
Shanghai during that period as well. Both the magazines and their editors played
significant roles in promoting the new writers into the literary arena.
The war disrupted the development of literature, their writing "nourishment" mostly
depended on the literary resources which had been stored up in Shanghai since the late
Qing. My discussion of these eight new writers, Zhang Ailing, Shi Jimei, Cheng Yuzhen,
Tang Xuehua, Zheng Dingwen, Shen Ji, Guo Peng, and Shi Qi, progresses through an
analysis of the elements of region, literature, and war.
While most of the female writers' themes were focused on love, mundane love or
God's love, the male writers were either more interested in setting their stories on
Chinese native soil like Shen Ji, Guo Peng, and Shi Qi; or personal concerns and
anxieties regarding the future such as Zheng Dingwen. Among her contemporaries,
Zhang Ailing is the most successful and the most influential.
These new writers did not go through the baptism of the May Fourth Movement, and
had less of a moral burden than their predecessors did. Thus they had more freedom to
develop their writings— although the freedom was confined due to a depressed political
and social climate.
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Nativist fiction in China and Taiwan: A thematic surveyHaddon, Rosemary M. 11 1900 (has links)
This dissertation comprises a historical survey and thematic analysis of the various regional
and temporal expressions of Chinese and Taiwanese xiangtu wenxue (“nativism” or
“homeland literature”). Chapter One traces Chinese xiangtu wenxue from the rural stories of Lu
Xun through the 1920s generation of writers of xiangtu wenxue (xiangtu zuojia f’g).
These writers used two different narrative modes to analyze China’s deepening rural crisis. One of
these was the antitraditionalist mode inspired by Lu Xun; the other was a positivist mode
formulated from new concepts and intellectual thought prevalent in China at the time of May
Fourth (1919). The narrative configuration established by this decade of xiangtu writers is
characterized by nostalgia and is based on the migration of the Chinese village intellectual to large
urban centres. This configuration set the standard for subsequent generations of writers of
xiangtu wenxue who used an urban narrator to describe a rural area which was either the author’s
native home, an area he/she knew well or one which was idealized.
Chapters Two and Five discuss Taiwanese xiangtu wenxue from the 1920s to the 1970s.
The emergence of this fiction is linked with Taiwan’s insecure status in the forum of international
relations. In Taiwanese xiangtu wenxue, the countryside is a refuge from the forces of
modernization; it is also a storehouse nurturing ancient traditions which are threatened by new and
modern ways. Taiwan’s xiangtu writers valorize traditional culture and seek in rural Taiwan a
transcendent China predating Taiwan’s invasion by the West. These works are all narrated by an
urban narrator who rejects modernity and desires to counteract foreign influences.
The focus of Chapter Three is China’s rural regional xiangtu wenxue of the 1930s. In this
decade, rural fiction became a general trend in China with the rise of the Chinese Communist
Party, Japanese aggression and China’s increasing urbanization. The shift away from China’s
urban-based fiction is characterized by an increasing concern for the peasants, regional decay
under the onslaught of Westernization and the life, customs and lore of China’s hinterland. In many of these regional works, concern for the nation is interwoven with non-nationalistic
interests.
Chinese xiangtu wenxue of the 1940s and 1950s is discussed in Chapter Four. The xiangtu
wenxue of this period took on a distinctly Communist guise in the wake of Mao Zedong’s 1942
Talks at the Yan’an Forum on Literature and Art. Chinese Communist xiangtu wenxue is
primarily defined as revolutionary realism and is concerned with the construction of Chinese
socialism which takes place in the countryside through the forced implementation of draconian
Party policies. The peasants in this fiction often attempt to evade these policies. Occasionally,
these stories and novels slip into a hardcore realistic mode conveying a peasant reality which
strongly dissents from the orthodox Party view. At least one writer of this period was persecuted
and killed for his putatively disloyal beliefs.
Finally, with the passing of Maoism in China, a new form of xiangtu wenxue emerged in the
mid-1980s. This is the subject of Chapter Six. In these works, traditional Chinese culture
supercedes Maoism as the basic fabric unifying Chinese life. Many of the writers in this period
evince a psychological bifurcation arising from their conflicting views about the value of traditional
Chinese culture. This bifurcation stems from the narrator in this fiction who is caught up in the
process of urbanization and is unable to fully integrate his vision of the countryside into a larger
vision of modernity. The ambivalence about Chinese culture in xiangtu wenxue is a leitmotif
which underlies xiangtu wenxue’s many, disparate forms.
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Danceland: a production recordCairns, Glen 05 1900 (has links)
The thesis is a record of the writing and
rehearsal process which led to the British premiere of
the full length Canadian play, Danceland, at The Old
Red Lion Theatre, London, in November of 1994. The
first chapter is a discussion of the dramatic theories
and historical research which informed the initial
creative writing process. The second chapter is the
final draft of the play itself. The third chapter is a
record of the rehearsal and production process, as well
as an overview of the major dramaturgical problems
which the actors, director and designers encountered
during rehearsals of the play. A full cast and crew
list and the reviews from the British press are
contained in the appendices.
The playwright's "experiment" which sits at the
heart of this production record is that Aristotle's
idea of "place" is essential to the creation of an
indigenous, Canadian dramatic literature. The writing
process, however, is only the beginning of the
translation of drama from the page to the stage; and it
is this final, rehearsal and production process which
demands that all dramatic theory be placed within the
context of believable characterization and dramatic
action.
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The role of the little magazine in the development of modernism and post-modernism in Canadian poetry /Norris, Ken January 1980 (has links)
Modernism and Post-Modernism in Canadian poetry have been introduced and developed in the pages of non-commercial "little magazines", beginning with F. R. Scott and A. J. M. Smith's McGill Fortnightly Review in 1925. Subsequent generations and schools of poets have made their first appearances and they have developed their ideas by producing their own magazines. / The aim of this dissertation is threefold: to investigate the phenomenon of the little magazine, its role as an essential alternative to commercial publications, and the sociological and aesthetic necessity for its survival; to investigate the progress that has taken place in Canadian poetry in the pages of the little magazine, as well as the evolution of the little magazine itself; in light of the fact that literary Modernism and Post-Modernism have not developed in Canada in isolation, to investigate the influence of European, English, and American poetic development in the twentieth century on Canadian poetry.
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Writing herself in : mother fiction and the female KünstlerromanLangston, Jessica January 2004 (has links)
This project examines the 'mother-writer problem' within contemporary Canadian fiction by women. Using three novels that tell the story of a mother who is also a writer, Margaret Laurence's The Diviners, Audrey Thomas' Intertidal Life and Carol Shields' Unless, I will outline the manner in which the roles of mother and writer are negotiated by the authors and their central characters. Further, I will investigate how creating a narrative about a female artist who is also a mother challenges and changes the structure and content of the standard female kunstlerroman. Finally, this thesis will attempt to determine how or if such challenges and changes improve the portrait-of-the-female-artist novel.
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Le conflit entre les régionalistes et les "exotiques" au Québec, 1900-1920.Hayward, Annette. January 1980 (has links)
Little is known about the literary quarrel in Quebec between the regionalists and the "exotics". This study, based mainly on a systematic analysis of periodicals, examines in detail and as objectively as possible the different arguments presented by the participants. After outlining the development of the two opposing parties, it describes their confrontation in 1918-1920 and the subsequent diversification that ends the quarrel in the thirties. This conflict can be divided into four distinct periods, beginning with the reaction of critics like Camille Roy and Louis Dantin to Emile Nelligan's poetry in 1904 and going up to the "canadianisme integral" of 1930. The argument concerned much more than literature, having important ideological implications related to French-Canadian nationalism at the beginning of the twentieth century. It is in this relationship between literature and French Canadian society that the specific nature of this debate can be £ound.
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Space and spatialization in contemporary music : history and analysis, ideas and implementations.Trochimczyk, Maja. January 1994 (has links)
Note: Pages have been removed from this digital copy due to copyright restrictions. A print copy is available in the McGill Library. / This dissertation presents the history of space in the musical thought of the 2Othcentury (from Kurth to Clifton, from Varèse to Xenakis) and outlines the development of spatialization in the theory and practice of contenlporary music (after 1950). The text emphasizes perceptual and temporal aspects of musical spatiality, thus reflecting the close connection of space and time in human experience. A new definition of spatialization draws from Ingarden’s notion of the musical work; a new typology of spatial designs embraces music for different acoustic environments, movements of performers and audiences, various positions of musicians in space, etc. The study of spatialization includes a survey of the writings of many composers (e.g. Ives, Boulez, Stockhausen, Cage) and an examination of their compositions. The final part of the dissertation presents three approaches to spatialization: Brant’ s simultaneity of sound layers, Xenakis’s movement of sound, and Schafer’s music of ritual and soundscape. / Cette thèse présente l’histoire de l’espace dans la pensée musicale du vingtième siècle (de Kurth à Clifton, de Varèse à Xenakis) et retrace le développement de la spatialisation dans la théorie et la pratique de la musique contemporaine (après 1950). Le texte souligne les aspects perceptuels et temporels de la spatialisation musicale, reflétant ainsi le lien étroit entre temps et espace t!ans l’expérience humaine. Une nouvelle définition de la spatialisation tire son origine de la notion de l’oeuvre musicale d’Ingarden; une nouvelle typologie des plans spatiaux prend en considération des musiques pour différents environnements acoustiques, diverses positions des musiciens dans l’espace de même que le mouvement de ceux-ci et des auditeurs, etc. L’étude de la spatialisation inclut un survol des écrits de plusieurs compositeurs (Ives, Stockhausen, Boulez et Cage, par exemple) de même qu’un examen de leurs oeuvres. La dernière partie de la thèse présente trois approches compositionnelles de la spatialisation: la simultanéité de strates sonores ,:hez Brant, le mouvement du son chez Xenakis et la musique du rituel et l’écologie sonore chez Schafer.
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An anthology of modern Arabic poetry, 1945-1984 : with a critical introductionAsfour, John. January 1984 (has links)
Note: Page 387 is missing from this electronic document because it is missing from the original archival version. / This study presents an Anthology of Modern Arabic Poetry from 1945 to 1984, selected and translated into English, containing poems by thirty-five poets who represent diverse regions of the Arab world. A critical introduction was designed to provide the Western reader with a brief overview of the literary, cultural, and political factors which have shaped the modernist movement in Arabic poetry of the past four decades. The “new poetry” is discussed in terms of form, the expansion of mythological interest which provided a common ground for the talents of the influential “Tammuzi poets,” and the relations between politics and poetry. Theories of Arabic poetic modernism have been examined with reference to modernist movements in the West which have both inspired and repelled Arabs in the search for a contemporary poetic form and idiom. / Cette etude presente une anthologie choisie de la poesie arabe moderne de 1945 a 1984, traduite en anglais, et regroupant des oeuvres de trente cinq poetes qui representent des regions diverses du monde arabe. Une introduction critique offrira au lecteur occidental un survol des facteurs litteraires, culturels et politiques qui ont fagonne Ie mouvement moderniste dans la poesie arabe des quatre dernieres decades. La "poesie nouvelle" est commentee en termes de forme, d' elaboration des interets mythologiques qui ont fourni un terrain commun aux influents poetes "Tammuzes," et de relations entre politique et poesie. Les theories du modernisme arabe en poesie sont etudiees en rapport avec les mouvements modernistes en Occident, mouvements qui ont a la fois inspire et repousse les Arabes qui cherchaient un langage et une forme poetiques contemporains.
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Unifying elements of John Corigliano’s Etude FantasyKuzmas, Janina 05 1900 (has links)
John Corigliano's Etude Fantasy (1976) is a significant and challenging addition to
the late twentieth century piano repertoire. A large-scale work, it occupies a particularly
important place in the composer's output of music for piano. The remarkable variety of
genres, styles, forms, and techniques in Corigliano's oeuvre as a whole is also evident in
his piano music. This profusion of sources and its application to the Etude Fantasy are
explored in the introduction, which is a general discussion o f the composer's background
and aesthetic stance.
The intriguing title of the Etude Fantasy implies the coexistence of two genres and
raises the issue of the role of each genre in the thematic and structural organization o f the
work. It is this issue which is the principal subject of inquiry in the thesis.
Chapter I examines the historical background o f the etude genre, discussing
similarities between the pianistic techniques employed in Corigliano's work and those
found in specific historical instances of the etude genre over two centuries.
Chapter II focuses on the historical background of the fantasia genre, emphasizing
contrasting characters, textures, and keys as the main indicators o f a free form, and at the
same time drawing attention to thematic transformation as a device of structural
unification.
Chapter III concentrates on elements that produce structural and formal coherence
in John Corigliano's Etude Fantasy. These elements are motivic, intervalic, melodic, and
harmonic in nature.
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