Spelling suggestions: "subject:"A story"" "subject:"A tory""
21 |
Story och spelare : En studie i storys påverkan av spelarenJohansson, Mathias January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
|
22 |
Using a Social Story to teach an eight-year-old girl with Autism a socially appropriate way of eating: A case studyVoges, Carina Madawa January 2009 (has links)
Few research studies have been conducted to investigate the use of a Social Story as sole intervention in changing inappropriate behaviors in children with autism. Most of the studies that used Social Stories as an intervention showed limitations like improper story construction (Appendix G), unsatisfactory design (AB design), and most lacked generalization and maintenance as described in the literature review.
This study assessed the utility of a properly constructed Social Story (Appendix G) as the sole intervention to change a dangerous and socially unacceptable way of eating in an eight year old girl with autism. Because of her unusual and sometimes aversive way of eating, often typical of children with ASD, morning tea and lunch times at the mainstream school she attended posed safety as well as social issues. The decision was made to use a changing conditions design (ABC).
|
23 |
The value of emphasizing the teaching of the short story in high schoolHawkins, Mary Pearl January 1950 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine the value of emphasizing the teaching of the short story as a means of stimulating young people in reading better literature.
|
24 |
The Way Things WereMesman-Hallman, Kira 01 January 2014 (has links)
These pieces were written as an exercise in examining how people, with all their idiosyncracies and differences in perception, can experience a single event in massively different ways. The headline for this story is simple. A young man on break from college comes out as gay to his best friend, and when his erotic feelings are unrequited their summer together falls apart. That is the story, but where is the truth? As I see it, the truth as we think of it is unobtainable. There is no one, perfect version of events that satisfactorily explains the hugely different reactions among the four characters that inhabit these stories. There are as many versions of the truth as there are people who experience it. Would you care to read and add another?
|
25 |
Entrepreneurial identity and capability : the role of learningRae, David January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
|
26 |
The performance of narrative and self in conversational story-telling : a multi-disciplinary approachDalton, K. January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
|
27 |
Time and subjectivity in contemporary short fictionCox, Ailsa January 1999 (has links)
The aesthetics of contemporary short fiction have been shaped by its ability to engage with time as a boundless process of becoming. Historically and philosophically, the emergence of the short story as a specific genre may be related to modernist concepts of time and subjectivity. 'Real' time, as it is experienced by the subject, is a flux, in which past and present co-mingle. In Bergsonian terms, an unquantifiable 'duration' 1S contrasted with Newtonian concepts of absolute time as a succession of discrete units. As Hanson has argued, narrative in the short story 1S structured by a seemingly random association of 1mages rather than linear causality. I contextualize the short story genre, historically and culturally, examining texts by George Egerton and Katherine Mansfield before moving on to the main focus of my thesis, which is texts by Alice Munro and Grace Paley. These also present a dynamic reality, within time as a continuum. However, while utilizing modernist techniques, they also subvert them, problematizing concepts of transcendence. The blurring of the boundaries between autobiographical discourse, orality and fiction is used to destabilize notions of a unified subjectivity and of fixed truth. My analysis applies Bakhtinian theories on language and subject formation to investigate this presentation of time as endless self-renewal. I also draw on Genette's narrative theory and introduce Kristevan theory to investigate the speaking subject from a psychoanalytical viewpoint, with particular reference to the gendered subject. The Bakhtinian concept of the chronotope enables the theorization of the space-time nexus as the foundation of generic specificity; I offer a generic chronotope for the short story, which is grounded in the present moment. An examination of the fiction-making process, through a discussion of my own short stories, concludes this discussion of the short story as a form of contact with undefinable reality.
|
28 |
Redeeming the short story cycle evolution of one last literary gneres /Mattern, Joshua James Wilson. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A..)--Marshall University, 2008. / Title from document title page. Includes abstract. Document formatted into pages: contains Includes bibliographical references
|
29 |
Comedy in the modern short story a study of the interrelationship of mode, theme, and genre.Van Dyke, Patricia Ann, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1973. / Typescript. Vita. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
|
30 |
Death situations in the short story : a study in structureRuthrof, Horst January 1968 (has links)
In an article on Ernst Cassirer, Konstantin Reichardt says, Since form is the only rational factor of every art, and the form of each art manifests a specific order, 'the order and form of the arts are to be investigated, if we want to examine the artist's imagination at work and the architecture of the world of art. It is the aim of this thesis to cast some light on a small, yet beautiful building within the complex architecture of this world of art, the genre of the short story. To isolate its structural and generic characteristics in general, however, would entail an analytical investigation into a huge number of short stcries, a task too great to be tackled in a thesis. Intro., p. 8.
|
Page generated in 0.0419 seconds