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Multivalent Cultural Forces in the Siyah Qalam Lion Rider: A Case Study in Visual Transmission from the Persianate WorldCichan, Alexander January 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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Visualising illness and wellness in the nineteenth-century homeWoodruff, Olivia January 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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Graffiti as Living Archive: Carceral Aesthetics at an Inquisitorial Prison in SicilyKazemi, Mitra January 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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Technically Subversive: Encrypted Communication in the South African National Liberation StruggleToupin, Sophie January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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J.A.G. Ackes och Eugène Janssons vitalistiska måleri 1904 - 1912 : En receptionsestetisk analysBeckman, Karin January 2016 (has links)
I uppsatsen analyseras J.A.G. Ackes friluftsmåleri och Eugène Janssons figurmåleri från flottans badhus ur ett idéhistoriskt perspektiv, med tonvikt lagd på de vitalistiska tankar som var aktuella vid tiden för sekelskiftet 1900, liksom på Friedrich Nietzsches och Henri Bergsons inflytande på motivsfären. Därefter följer en receptionsestetisk analys av de fyra verk vardera som tidigare analyserats. Resultatet visar att Ackes och Janssons verk inte kan tolkas utifrån samma förståelse av vitalismen. Den receptionsestetiska undersökningen uppmärksammar dock att deras verk kan ha tilltalat samma implicite betraktare år 1912, trots deras olika förhållningssätt till vitalismens innebörd. / In the thesis four paintings by J.A.G.Acke depicting figures in nature and four by Eugène Jansson from the navys bathhouse are compared and analysed. The analysis is based on the vitalistic ideas of Friedrich Nietzsche and Henri Bergson, as well as on different readings of vitalism as a concept. Their works are also analysed using the methodology of the aesthetic of reception. The result of the survey shows that Ackes and Janssons paintings differ in their interpretation of the vitalistic ideas. The analysis of the aesthetic of reception on the other hand, concludes that an implicit beholder could have read both artists paintings as vitalistic, in spite of their different approach to the vitalistic ideas.
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A study of the Neolithic architecture of Thessaly, GreeceElia, Ricardo J. January 1982 (has links)
All available evidence for architecture of the Neolithic
Period in Thessaly, Greece, is assembled and synthesized.
The traditional house-type concept used in previous
studies is reviewed and shown to contain a number of theoretical
and methodological weaknesses. A new theoretical
approach is developed, which treats Neolithic architecture
as an integral component of the overall cultural system,
reflecting climatic conditions, building technology, social
organization, household structure, religion and ideology.
The existence of a separate Aceramic phase in Thessaly
is questioned; the "pithouse" architecture of that phase is
rejected for lack of evidence. The earliest Early Neolithic
architecture appears to be a local development of rectilinear
houses of wood and clay; pise, mud brick, and stone
foundations were also used. Evidence for Middle Neolithic
architecture is more abundant, and takes the form of house
remains and clay house models. MN settlements consist of
detached but closely grouped houses separated by lanes and common courts. Houses are typically small, one-room structures
of square or slightly elongated plan. Mud brick on
stone foundations, and pitched roofs, are typical. Households
probably consisted of nuclear families.
The so-called "megara" of the MN period are shown to
be locally developed parched houses. The identification of
the "Tsangli houses" with similar structures from Can Hasan
2B in Anatolia, and the posited migration from there into
Thessaly, are rejected on the basis of an archaeological
comparison of the architecture of the two sites.
Limited data for the LN period suggest a shift to
smaller, more nucleated settlements. Houses seem to be
larger now than in the MN period; this may reflect either
occupation by extended families or the existence of status
distinctions. The traditional interpretation of LN Dimini
as the fortified palace of a king is reconsidered in light
of a discussion of the ''Homeric model" implicit in the original
excavator's reasoning, and on the basis of recent
excavations at that site. Remains of the Final Neolithic
are extremely limited; the existence of an apsidal house at
Rakhmani suggests affinities with the architecture of the
early phases of the Early Bronze Age in the region.
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The sound of government realism: The politics and aesthetics of NFB film music, 1939-1964Rogers, Allyson January 2024 (has links)
No description available.
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Antiquity Expanded: Ancient West Asian and North African Architecture in European Art, c. 1450-1570Scott, Braden January 2023 (has links)
No description available.
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Killing the business: affect, work, and kayfabe in professional wrestlingFontaine, Jessica January 2024 (has links)
No description available.
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Towards Something ElseDi Gironimo, Sofia January 2024 (has links)
No description available.
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