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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.
11

New York in der zeitgenössischen amerikanischen Erzählliteratur

Kreutzer, Eberhard. January 1985 (has links)
Habilitationsschrift--Universität Bonn, 1981. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 319-333) and index.
12

Die Darstellung der Bereiche Stadt und Land bei Theokrit

Reinhardt, Thomas. January 1988 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, 1986. / Includes bibliographical references.
13

Productive waste : rhetorical economies in Thomas Middleton's city comedies /

Shea, Jo Anne, January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 1998. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 228-247). Available also in a digital version from Dissertation Abstracts.
14

At home in the city : networked space and urban domesticity in American literature, 1850-1920 /

Klimasmith, Elizabeth, January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2000. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 245-255).
15

The city as a point of transition in the lives of Esmeralda Santiago and Judith Ortiz Cofer

Joiner, Monica Michelle. January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Louisville, 2004. / Department of Classical and Modern Languages. Vita. "May 2004." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 30-35).
16

Imagining the city in Zimbabwean literature 1949 to 2009

Muchemwa, Kizito Zhiradzago 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)-- Stellenbosch University, 2013. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: My thesis is on the literary imagining of the city in Zimbabwean literature that emerges as a re-visioning and contestation of its colonial and postcolonial manifestations. Throughout the seven chapters of the thesis I conduct a close reading of literary texts engaged in literary (re)creations of the city. I focus on texts by selected authors from 1949 to 2009 in order to trace the key aspects of this city imagining and their historical situatedness. In the first chapter, I argue the case for the inclusions and exclusions that are evident. In this historical span, I read the Zimbabwean canon and the city that is figured in it as palimpsests in order to analyse (dis)connections. This theoretical frame brings out wider relationships and connections that emerge in the (re)writing of both the canon and city. I adopt approaches that emphasise how spaces and temporalities ‗overlap and interlace‘ to provoke new ways of thinking about the city and the construction of identity. I argue for the country-city connection as an important dynamic in the various (re)imaginings of the city. Space is politicized along lines of race, ethnicity, gender and class in regimes of politics and aesthetics of inclusion and exclusion that are refuted by the focal texts of the thesis. I analyse the fragmentation of rural and urban space in the literary texts and how country and city house politico-aesthetic regimes of domination, exclusion and marginalisation. Using tropes of the house, music and train, I analyse how connections in the city are imagined. These tropes are connected to the travel motif found in all the chapters of the thesis. Travel is in most of the texts offered as a form of escape from the country represented as a site of essentialism or nativism. Both settlers and nationalists, from different ideological positions, invest the land and the city with symbolic political and cultural values. Both figure the city as alien to the colonised, a figuration that is contested in most of the focal texts of the thesis. Travel from the country to the city through halfway houses is presented as a way of negotiating location in new spaces, finding new identities and contending with the multiple connections found in the city. The relentless (un)housing in Marechera‘s writing expresses a refusal to be bounded by aesthetic, nationalist and racial houses as they are constructed in the city. In Vera‘s fiction, travel – in multifarious directions and in a re-racing of the quest narrative in Lessing – becomes a critical search for a re-scripting of gender and woman‘s demand for a right to the city. The nomadism in Vera‘s fiction is re-configured in the portrayal of the marginalised as the parvenus and pariahs of the city in the fiction of Chinodya and Tagwira. In the chapter on Chikwava and Gappah, in the contexts of spatial displacement and expansion, the nationalist nativist construction of self, city and nation comes under stress. I interrogate how ideologies of space shape politico-aesthetic regimes in both the country and the city throughout the different historical phases of the city. In this regard I adopt theoretical approaches that engage with questions of aesthetic equality as they relate to the contestation of spatial partitioning based on categories of race, gender and class. In city re-imaginings this re-claiming of aesthetic power to imagine the city is invoked and in all the texts it emerges as a reclaiming of the right to the city by the colonised, women, immigrants and all the marginalised. I adopt those approaches that lend themselves to the deconstruction of hegemonic figuration, disempowerment and silencing of the marginalised, especially women, in re-imagining the city and their identities in it. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: My tesis se onderwerp is die literêre voorstellings van die stad in Zimbabwiese letterkunde wat ontstaan as ‗n herverbeelding van en teenvoeter vir beide koloniale en postkoloniale manifestasies. Regdeur die sewe hoofstukke van die tesis voer ek deurtastende interpretasies van literêre tekste aan, wat die stad op nuwe maniere uitbeeld. My fokus val op tekste deur geselekteerde skrywers van 1949 tot 2009 ten einde die sleutelelemente van hierdie proses van stadverbeelding en die historiese gesitueerdheid daarvan te ondersoek. In die eerste hoofstuk bied ek die argument aan betreffende die voor-die-hand liggende in- en uitsluitings van tekste. Deur hierdie historiese strekking lees ek die Zimbabwiese kanon en die stad wat daarin figureer as palimpseste, ten einde die (dis-)konneksies te kan analiseer. Hierdie teoretiese beraming belig die wyere verhoudings en verbindings wat na vore kom in die (her-) skrywe van beide die kanon en die stad. Ek gebruik benaderings wat benadruk hoe ruimtes en tydelikhede oormekaarvloei en saamvleg om sodoende nuwe maniere om oor die stad en oor identiteitskonstruksie te besin, aanmoedig. Ek argumenteer vir die stad-platteland konneksie as ‗n belangrike dinamika in die verskillende (her-)voorstellings van die stad. Ruimte word só verpolitiseer met betrekking tot ras, etnisiteit, gender en klas binne politieke regimes asook ‗n estetika van in- en uitsluiting wat deur die kern-tekste verwerp word. Ek analiseer verder die fragmentasie van landelike en stedelike ruimtes in die literêre tekste, en hoe die plattelandse en stedelike ruimtes tuistes bied aan polities-estetiese regimes van dominasie, uitsluiting en marginalisering. Die huis, musiek en die trein word gebruik as beelde om verbindings in die stad te ondersoek. Hierdie beelde sluit aan by die motif van die reis wat in al die hoofstukke manifesteer. Die reis word in die meeste tekste gesien as ‗n vorm van ontsnapping uit die platteland, wat voorgestel word as ‗n plek van essensie-voorskrywing en ingeborenheid. Beide intrekkers en nasionaliste, uit verskillende ideologiese vertrekpunte, bekleed die platteland of die stad met simboliese politieke en kulturele waardes. Beide verbeeld die stad as vreemd aan die gekoloniseerdes; ‗n uitbeelding wat verwerp word in die fokale tekste van die studie. Reis van die platteland na die stad deur halfweg-tuistes word aangebied as metodes van onderhandeling om plek te vind in nuwe ruimtes, nuwe identiteite te bekom en om te leer hoe om met die stedelike verbindings om te gaan. Die onverbiddelikke (ont-)tuisting in die werk van Marechera gee uitdrukking aan ‗n weiering om deur estetiese, nasionalistiese en rassiese behuising soos deur die stad omskryf en voorgeskryf, vasgevang te word. In die fiksie van Vera word reis – in telke rigtings en in die her-rassing van die soektog-motif in Lessing – ‗n kritiese soeke na die herskrywing van gender en van die vrou se op-eis van die reg tot die stad. Die nomadisme in Vera se fiksie word ge-herkonfigureer in uitbeelding van gemarginaliseerdes as die parvenus en die uitgeworpenes van die stad in die fiksie van Chinodya en Tagwira. In die hoofstuk oor Chikwava en Gappah word die nasionalistiese ingeborenes se konstruering van die self, stad en nasie onder stremmimg geplaas in kontekste van ruimtelike verplasing en uitbreiding. Ek ondervra hoe ideologieë van spasie vorm gee aan polities-estetiese regimes in beide die platteland en die stad regdeur die verskillende historiese fases van die stad. In hierdie opsig maak ek gebruik van teoretiese benaderings wat betrokke is met vraagstukke van estetiese gelykheid met verwysing na kontestasies oor ruimtelike verdelings gebaseer op kategorieë van ras, gender en klas. In herverbeeldings van die stad word hierdie reklamering van die estetiese mag om die stad te verbeel, bygehaal in al die tekste as herklamering van die reg tot die stad deur gekoloniseerdes, vroue, immigrante en alle gemarginaliseerdes. Ek maak gebruik van benaderings wat hulself leen tot die dekonstruksie van hegemoniese verbeelding, ontmagtiging en die stilmaak van gemarginaliseerdes, veral vroue, in die herverbeelding van die stad en hul plek binne die stadsruimte.
17

Reading the modern city, reading Joyce and Eliot: a study of flânerie in literary representation.

January 2004 (has links)
Lau Kin-wai. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 101-109). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Abstract --- p.ii / 論文摘要 --- p.iii / Acknowledgements --- p.iv / Introduction: Reading Joyce and Eliot with Baudelaire in View --- p.1 / Chapter Chapter One: --- The City in Literary Representation / Chapter 1. --- The City and its Streets in a Literary and Cultural Context --- p.8 / Chapter 2. --- "Writing (about) the Modern City: ""Joycity"" and Eliot's Cities" --- p.15 / Chapter Chapter Two: --- The City and the Flaneur / Chapter 1. --- Origins and Characteristics of the Baudelairean Flaneur --- p.21 / Chapter 2. --- From Baudelaire to Joyce and Eliot --- p.25 / Chapter Chapter Three: --- In Search of the Joycean/ Eliotian Flaneur / Chapter 1. --- Voices in the City: Personae and Their Perspectives --- p.31 / Chapter 2. --- Literary Reincarnation and the Tradition of Flanerie --- p.33 / Chapter a. --- Stephen and Daedalus --- p.35 / Chapter b. --- Prufrock and Dante --- p.39 / Chapter c. --- Bloom and Odysseus --- p.43 / Chapter d. --- Tiresias as Ancient and Modern --- p.46 / Chapter Chapter Four: --- Flanerie and Two Faces of Unreality of the City / Chapter 1. --- Cities as States of Mind --- p.49 / Chapter a. --- Eliot's Unreal City 1 --- p.50 / Chapter b. --- Joyce's Unreal Dublin 1 --- p.56 / Chapter 2. --- Wandering in the City with the Dead --- p.61 / Chapter a. --- Eliot's Unreal City II --- p.63 / Chapter b. --- Joyce's Unreal Dublin II --- p.68 / Chapter Chapter Five: --- Flanerie in a Wider Context of the Society / Chapter 1. --- Flanerie as an Asocial Act --- p.72 / Chapter 2. --- The Flaneur and the Familiar Stranger --- p.82 / Chapter 3. --- The Erotic as Sociality --- p.85 / Conclusion: Flanerie and the Emergence of a Critical Vision --- p.95 / Works Cited --- p.101
18

Welcome to Sodom: the cultural work of city-mysteries fiction in antebellum America

Erickson, Paul Joseph 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
19

Walter Benjamin : models of experience and visions of the city

Walker, Brian. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
20

Fragmented urban images the American city in modern fiction from Stephen Crane to Thomas Pynchon /

Hurm, Gerd, January 1900 (has links)
Originally presented as the author's Thesis (doctoral--Freiburg i. Br., 1989) under the title: Fragmented images. / Includes bibliographical references (p. [337]-357) and index.

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