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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.
31

A Study of Christina Rossetti's Poems on Death

Yang, Okhee J. 05 1900 (has links)
Throughout her life Christina Rossetti was pursued by the thought of death. Many of her poems, especially her later poems, display her concerns about death. Her early poems show death as the destroyer of mortal things, reflecting her pessimism and her sometimes naturalistic views on life. Her death wish is sometimes associated with her thwarted desire for absolute love in the world. Her religious poems describe death as the gate to heaven or to hell, the final resting place from the pains of her life. Either as her religious yearning for a better place of Resurrection or as her way of expressing her unfulfilled desire in the world, her persistent theme of death is an expression of the conflict between a sometimes skeptical, sometimes religious view.
32

Designing evaluation tools for the Differentiated Instruction Staff Development Initiative

Downes, Dawn M. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--University of Delaware, 2006. / Principal faculty advisor: James Raths, School of Education. Includes bibliographical references.
33

Calderón, el cisma sueco de los Vasa y el tropo "Teatro del mundo" : estudios

Vasquez-Lopera, Julian January 1999 (has links)
The ancient concept "The world is a theatre" has been used by poets and philosophers at all times when talking about human conflicts or when describing human society. By focusing on the historical function of this use, the present dissertation examines four plays by Pedro Calderón de la Barca in relation to the schism of the Swedish Wasa dynasty: El sitio de Bredá, La protestación de la fe, La vida es sueño, Afectos de odio y amor. A parallel between Calderon's "auto sacramental" El gran teatro del mundo, Descartes' so called "mask" and the Neoplatonic "Art of Memory" (Giulio Camillo, Giordano Bruno, Robert Fludd) is established in order to explore the ontological and social background of the linguistic term "discourse". The heretic picture created by the European Counter Reformation is studied as the mimetic configuration of a collective fetish. Stephen Greenblatt's notion of "social energy" and Julia Kristeva's account of the fetish in poetical language, are, in this context, discussed with the intention to investigate how Calderón, to the Spanish audience, describes Wladislav Sigismund Vasa visit to Breda's siege and Queen Christina's convertion to the Catholic faith. The political and ideological debate of laws ruling the succession in Catholic and Protestant kingdoms are considered when discussing Diego de Saavedra y Fajardo's (from Catholic Spain) and Schering Rosenhane's (from Lutheran Sweden) political reflections on the issue; this is also compared to the ideological foundations of Calderon's play El gran teatro del mundo. Both King Sigismund Vasa's personal struggle to retain the Swedish crown and Queen Christina's abdication, are considered in the light of Calderon's La protestación de la fe and Rosenhane's political vision in his Hortus Regius. A special investigation is dedicated to the striking contrasts between the original emblems of Hortus Regius and those found today in Rosenhane's palace, having been painted there on the initiative of Rosenhane himself. The Catholic agitation against Machiavelli's definition of "virtue" and the Machiavellian and Catholic interpretation of "reason of state", are related to Calderon's theatre with the intention of evaluating the geopolitical aspects of Calderon's most famous play, La vida es sueño, and also with the purpose to initiate a discussion about the theatrical nature of political behaviour. The dissertation concludes by studying and comparing Calderon's, Bernardino de Rebolledo's (Spanish ambassador to Denmark at the time) and Francisco Bances Candamo's views on Queen Christina's personal aversion to marriage, with special attention paid to the symbolic dimensions of Queen Christina's Amaranta Order.
34

The demon & the damozel : dynamics of desire in the works of Christina Rossetti and Dante Gabriel Rossetti /

Waldman, Suzanne Maureen, January 1900 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Thesis Ph. D. / Bibliogr. p. 187-196. Index.
35

The authority of childhood : three components of the childlike spirit in poems by Robert Louis Stevenson, Kate Greenaway, and Christina Rossetti.

Barrick, Jean Anne. January 1971 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Teachers College, Columbia University, 1971. / Typescript; issued also on microfilm. Sponsor: Leland B. Jacobs. Dissertation Committee: Maxine Greene. Includes bibliographical references.
36

Flätade röster/aktiva pauser : En studie i Christina Ouzounidis dramatik

Olsson, Karl-Fredrik January 2017 (has links)
I uppsatsen undersöks Christina Ouzounidis tre dramatexter Heterofil, Naturen, vanorna, tiden, moralen och Spår av Antigone, vilka alla tre bär undertiteln sensus communis. Med en teoretisk bakgrund av dramatexten, postdramatik och dekonstruktion analyseras dramatexterna utifrån teaterhändelse, tema, innehåll och form.  Ouzounidis dramatexter granskar och skärskådar vår samtid. Rollfigurer och handling, två klassiska dramelement är av mindre betydelse. Ouzounidis formulerar en dekonstruerad dramatik som inte vill förhålla sig, utan som hela tiden verkar vilja bryta med det förväntade och med de givna formerna.  Dramatexternas fragmentariska stil bidrar också till uppfattningen om en dekonstruerad dramatik, rollfigurernas repliker överlappar varandra, de fyller i varandras meningar och rösterna flätas samman i röstspel. Pauserna, där replikerna får landa eller ifrågasättas, fungerar också som ett ifrågasättande av rytmen och formen som skapas. Stilen och formen kan hela tiden förändras.
37

The Bifurcated Personalities of Christina Rossetti and Dante Gabriel Rossetti as Reflected in Their "Sister Poems"

Becherer, Nadine L. (Nadine Lee) 12 1900 (has links)
Christina Rossetti and Dante Gabriel Rossetti both suffered from ambivalent feelings concerning the role female sexuality plays in the salvation of the soul. These ambivalent feelings ranged from seeing female sexuality as leading men to salvation, to seeing it as a trap for the destruction of women's souls as well as men's. The contradictory feelings of the Rossettis' typifies the Victorian people's experience and was caused by the nature of the times. Using the analysis of the period by Walter E. Houghton in The Victorian Frame of Mind: 1830-1870, this paper describes the affect the Victorians' religious zeal, their "moral earnestness," and their "woman-worship" had on the two Rossetti poets.
38

”Jag vill ha slitningar där sprickor växer, där avstånd mellan tid och tid / blir kött” : Att teckna i negationer: En studie av negationens kritiska potential i Christina Ouzounidis postdramatiska teatertext Spår av Antigone (2014) / "I want breakages where cracks emerge, where the distance between time and time / becomes meat" : To draw in negations: A study of the critical potential of negation in Christina Ouzounidis postdramatic theatre text Spår av Antigone (2014)

Nelander, Sissela January 2020 (has links)
With basis in critical theory, as defined by Theodor W. Adorno, as well as Hans-Thies Lehmann’s theory on postdramatic theatre this study investigates the ethic and aesthetic processes of negation in Christina Ouzounidis theatre texts. Analyzing the ways in which the postdramatic form serves as a negation of classical dramaturgy, as well as reading the negative statements as representants of the very challenge of portraying utopia, the studie examines three main themes: the notion of postdramatic theatre text, the postdramatic adaption of classical texts and the political postdramatic.
39

Components of self

Unknown Date (has links)
My thesis exhibition is comprised of approximately eleven large-scale portrait paintings done primarily in oil paint on canvas. This body of work investigates the ways the identity of both artist and subject can coexist in a portrait and evolved from my desire to combine portrait painting with writing as well as to develop methods of using paint to express a merging of myself with the individual depicted in the portrait. My creative research has focused on the traditional form of the portrait as a powerful form of representing an individual and how meaning can be expanded through scale, brushstroke, color, texture, composition and the many variables that portraiture deals with. I expanded on the traditional portrait painting by cataloguing my memories and thoughts along with the thoughts of the subject by painting under, into and over the subject in my own handwriting. My "hand" is visible both in the brushstroke and in the cursive writing, preserving my identity in a "readable" way both literally and through graphology, or handwriting analysis. / by Christina Maya Major. / Thesis (M.F.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2010. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2010. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
40

Expressions of power: Queen Christina of Sweden and patronage in Baroque Europe

Popp, Nathan Alan 01 December 2015 (has links)
Queen Christina of Sweden (1626-1689) utilized art in many ways to promote herself and assert power in Baroque Europe. Previous scholars have addressed either Christina’s use of art to safeguard authority as Swedish regnant, or her expressions of sovereignty as an erstwhile Protestant queen in Rome, but no scholarship to date has addressed the topic of how Christina’s patronage developed, or explored how motifs employed early on later reappeared. This dissertation brings together both sides of the equation to provide a comprehensive understanding of how Queen Christina’s patronage developed in Stockholm, and how her approach evolved as she became a fixture in Rome. The deployment of the arts was necessary to assert Christina’s authority in a patriarchal environment and ultimately, to politically legitimize herself as an independent royal woman. An initial review of royal imagery of her father King Gustav II Adolf (1594-1632) provides the background for examination of early patronage promoting Christina, which drew upon Gustav’s precedents while beginning to establish her as a majestic leader in her own right. Originally the queen’s autonomy was limited by a constitutional rewrite as others steered her image for their own benefit, but Christina matured to make her own choices and developed an approach to patronage that continued throughout her life. My research contributes to our understanding of Christina’s development as art patron by examining commissions that counteract this administrative system that restrained her sovereignty. Portraits from her majority rule relied on iconography and visual rhetoric to influence a select audience, while her coronation and abdication proceedings, by contrast, were multisensory public events that broadly proclaimed her capacity to rule. Hence my analysis ranges from the subtle reading of particular images to taking stock of the language of sheer pageantry of those more public visual displays. After abdication Queen Christina had virtually no political clout, but as dowager regnant, she wielded art and patronage to maintain social standing and power. My research considers how Christina deployed the arts to craft her public persona and express her individuality within the male-dominated political structure of the Vatican even as others played off her remarkable abdication with patronage of their own. Christina’s approach was based on precedents developed in Sweden, and she applied them to her Roman situation with varied success. Through many challenges, scandals, and adversities, art was a potent vehicle both for Christina and for those around her to capitalize on her unique status in the history of Baroque Europe.

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