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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.
1

The global image : the making of an icon?

Milton, Deborah Anne January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
2

De Apolline et graeca Minerva deis medicis ...

Bruchmann, Karl Friedrich Heinrich, January 1900 (has links)
Diss. Inaug. - Breslau. / Vita.
3

Cretan elements in the cults and ritual of Apollo ...

Swindler, Mary Hamilton, January 1913 (has links)
Thesis (PH. D.)--Bryn Mawr college, 1913. / Vita. Published also as Bryn Mawr monographs; monograph series, vol. XIII. Bibliography: p. [70]-77.
4

Apoll und der Apollonkult seit der Renaissance

Heissmeyer, Antje, January 1967 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Tübingen. / Vita. Bibliography: p. 162-172.
5

The origin and original nature of Apollo

Miller, Robert Daniel, January 1939 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Pennsylvania, 1939. / Includes bibliographical references.
6

The two faces of Apollo : Propertius and the poetry of politics

Steenkamp, Johan Jacobus 09 October 2010 (has links)
In the Ancient World the god Apollo has traditionally been associated with poets and their art and in the Augustan age, the Golden Age of Roman literature, use of the image of Apollo is important for the understanding of the poetry. For Propertius the image of Apollo was, to a large extent, associated with two important aspects of his world: As god of poetry Apollo was associated with a refined and polished style of poetry following the tenets laid down by the Alexandrian poet Callimachus. Apollo was also associated with Octavian, who regarded the god as his patron deity. Examining Propertius’ poetry by looking at how he employed these two aspects of the god gives fresh insights into both Augustan literature and Roman culture of the period. The use of the image of Apollo by Propertius increases as the poet’s voice develops through his career and he gives more social commentary. The poet frequently defines his poetic position through the image of the Callimachean Apollo and through the comparison of his Callimachean Apollo with that of Vergil. Propertius’ social commentary on the horrors of civil war is expressed through a description of the Temple of Apollo on the Palatine and the artworks in it that display Apollo’s warlike aspects. The rejection of Vergil’s warlike Actian Apollo in 2.34 and embrace of the Callimachean Apollo in 3.1-5, allows him to comment on the warmongering culture among the ruling elite in Rome and define himself in opposition to them. Finally, the two faces of Apollo serve in poem 4.6 as an image through which Propertius can reconcile the worlds of the Roman general and the poet. / Thesis (DLitt)--University of Pretoria, 2010. / Ancient Languages / unrestricted
7

Taking Apollo by the horns : reconsidering the cult(s) of Apollo Karneios in the Mediterranean

Nenci, Nicola January 2016 (has links)
This dissertation examines Apollo Karneios’ cult(s) in its religious, festive, and political aspects, and investigates the deity’s role in civic and ethnic identities: one of the most striking features of the cult of this deity is the evidence for its presence in many Dorian communities throughout the Mediterranean, particularly in Sparta, where Apollo Karneios’ cult was of central significance. My research endeavours to clarify the cult’s use in political relations between ancient Sparta and its colonies, and interrogates the evidence to determine where and when the cult originated; how we can recognise the deity in visual material; if Karneios was a Spartan god, or if he ‘belonged’ to all Dorians; and the role of his cult in the foundation of Spartan colonies, such as Thera and Cyrene. This work begins with a review of how previous scholarship addressed those issues raised above, and continues with an analysis of the iconography of the deity, combining literary sources with autopsy of the material evidence, which includes sculpted stelai, archaeological sites and monuments, and most numerous of all, inscriptions. Organising the evidence according to geographical areas, my work progresses comparing and contrasting the manifestation and character of the cult in various locations. In addition, my new readings of literary and epigraphical sources, combined with first-hand study of archaeological evidence, result in new reconstructions of monuments related to Karneios’ cult, and offers a new interpretation of Spartan civic and religious topography. As a last step, my research argues that although the cult displays regional variations to reflect local identities, the many similarities established a Dorian network around the Mediterranean, which changed over time. This study contributes to the ongoing discussion on the formation and modifications of local identities and political relations among the Dorian poleis of the Mediterranean, highlighting the role of religion, and, in particular of Apollo Karneios in this complex historical process.
8

The rocket and the tarot : the Apollo moon landings and American culture at the dawn of the seventies

Tribbe, Matthew David 26 October 2010 (has links)
Although the Apollo 11 moon landing was one of the most remarkable events of the twentieth century, it was also among the most abstruse—what did it mean, after all? With implications ranging from the everyday benefits of “spinoff” to the cosmic questions of existence, it seemed like it had to signify something important. But the United States was undergoing a profound cultural shift as the 1960s gave way to the 1970s, a transformative moment when the rationalist, technological optimism of the high Space Age began losing traction to the more intuitive, relativistic, neo-romantic cultural aura of the 1970s. This turn left many Americans who reckoned that Apollo should be important—somehow, in some way—unable to adequately integrate the event into their worldviews, their American mythologies. This study examines how Americans attempted to make sense of Apollo in the 1960s and 1970s. This period saw a noticeable retreat from the faith in science and rationalism that had driven American thought and culture in the decades following World War II, and which formed the foundation of the successful space program. In its stead emerged a new understanding of “progress” that was divorced from its previous equation with technological advancement for its own sake and reconsidered in terms of its impact on sustainability and personal fulfillment. In this environment, Apollo—an endeavor that that ultimately seemed to offer no deeper meaning that itself—provided bold evidence that the crucial answers to life’s quandaries would not be discovered through technological journeys to the near planets; indeed, that the prolonged emphasis on these sorts of materialist endeavors had only obscured humanity’s quest for true meaning and its continued sustenance on what Apollo made abundantly clear was the only planet it would inhabit for a long time to come. This cultural turn spelled doom for a space program that for all its futuristic trappings was actually firmly rooted in the past, in a mindset that had flourished throughout the middle of the twentieth century but was now falling under wide suspicion. / text
9

Elucidation of Snm1B Function

Stringer, Jay January 2012 (has links)
<p>The protein Snm1B binds to the telomere binding protein TRF2 to help protect telomeres from DNA damage during S phase. In addition, Snm1B protects DNA from agents that induce interstrand crosslinks (ICLs), lethal lesions that covalently attach the opposite strands of DNA together. To elucidate how Snm1B performs these functions I performed a yeast two-hybrid screen to identify proteins binding to the C-terminus of Snm1B. From this screen I identified PSF2 (GINS2), a member of the tetrameric protein complex GINS, to bind Snm1B. The GINS complex is required for replication initiation and elongation. Of interest, the knockdown of PSF2 sensitizes cells to ICL inducing agents. I therefore tested the interaction of PSF2 and Snm1B by co-immunoprecipitation from human cells and discovered that PSF2 binds to two regions of Snm1B. Deletion of the first of these regions inhibited the ability of Snm1B to co-immunoprecipitate with the protein Mus81, a structure specific endonuclease that is required to form double strand breaks (DSBs) as an intermediate in ICL repair. Deletion of the second binding region reduced the ability of PSF2 to localize Snm1B onto chromatin. These data support a role for an interaction of Snm1B with PSF2 in ICL repair.</p> / Dissertation
10

All inclusive fitness : En studie med könsperspektiv

Jengiri, Beri, Johansson, Sofie January 2015 (has links)
This study aims to study how individuals' attitudes to the new travel trend fitness journeys, with basis in gender and society's expectations. The study is about how Apollo and Ving’smarket looks for the segment fitness trips, but also how these two agencies can broaden it’s audience and attract the younger crowd who are individuals aged 30 years and younger. The study has a gender perspective, and therefore it is of interest to write about how women's and men's perception of fitness trips are different. The study is based on two methods, qualitative and quantitative. The qualitative approach is an interview form that was sent out through e-mail to Jenny Tägtström at Apollo who works as a sales-and marketing Co-ordinator and Magdalena Öhrn at Ving with the position as a communication manager. The quantitative method was designed as a questionnaire sent out through Facebook in different training groups, a total of 301 responses were submitted. The responses have been analyzed and reconnected with the theories that was further on used in the study. The theories that the study related to is stereotypes theory,escape seeking dichotomy, gender theoryabout the different gender rolesandidentity building theory. The study presents that it ́s manly the gender women who contribute in this kind of trips in a greater extent then men. The gender plays a big role when it comes to choose a fitness trip or not but also in the everyday society. The result also shows that there is room for Apollo and Ving to review their marketing as they currently do to them self-market themselves to a larger target group then they actually do but they miss the younger potential consumers which is individuals aged 30 years and younger

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