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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

Linking Genesis to modern day castaway narratives

Russell, Shawndra. January 2005 (has links)
Theses (M.A.)--Marshall University, 2005. / Title from document title page. Includes abstract. Document formatted into pages: contains vi, 76 p. Bibliography: p. 73-74.
32

The Garden, the Serpent, and Eve: An Ecofeminist Narrative Analysis of Garden of Eden Imagery in Fashion Magazine Advertising

Colette, Shelly Carmen January 2012 (has links)
Garden of Eden imagery is ubiquitous in contemporary print advertising in North America, especially in advertisements directed at women. Three telling characteristics emerge in characterizations of Eve in these advertising reconstructions. In the first place, Eve is consistently hypersexualized and over-eroticized. Secondly, such Garden of Eden images often conflate the Eve figure with that of the Serpent. Thirdly, the highly eroticized Eve-Serpent figures also commonly suffer further conflation with the Garden of Eden itself. Like Eve, nature becomes eroticized. In the Eve-Serpent-Eden conflation, woman becomes nature, nature becomes woman, and both perform a single narrative plot function, in tandem with the Serpent. The erotic and tempting Eve-Serpent-Eden character is both protagonist and antagonist, seducer and seduced. In this dissertation, I engage in an ecofeminist narratological analysis of the Genesis/Fall myth, as it is retold in contemporary fashion magazine advertisements. My analysis examines how reconstructions of this myth in advertisements construct the reader, the narrator, and the primary characters of the story (Eve, Adam, the Serpent, and Eden). I then further explore the ways in which these characterizations inform our perceptions of woman, nature, and environmentalism. Using a narratological methodology, and through a poststructuralist ecofeminist lens, I examine which plot and character elements have been kept, which have been discarded, and how certain erasures impact the narrative characterizations of the story. In addition to what is being told, I further analyze how and where it is told. How is the basic plot being storied in these reconstructions, and what are the effects of this version on the archetypal characterizations of Eve and the Garden of Eden? What are the cultural and literary contexts of the reconstructed narrative and the characters within it? How do these contexts inform how we read the characters within the story? Finally, I examine the cultural effects of these narrative reconstructions, exploring their influence on our gendered relationships with each other and with the natural world around us.
33

Macroeconomic Conceptualization in EVE Online

Rempel, Leonid January 2020 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Ryan Chahrour / Virtual Economies present an excellent opportunity to study Economic concepts and phenomena in a controllable environment where perfect data collection exists. This paper uses Macroeconomic data provided by CCP Games on EVE Online to explore how the Quantity Theory of Money holds in a world without finance. The study supports the Real Business Cycle's effects on prices. Furthermore, a quick look is taken on the effects that player imposed borders have on trade within the EVE universe. It appears that, even in a virtual world, borders tend to reduce patterns of trade among neighboring regions. These findings encourage the further use of virtual economies, particularly Massive Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games (MMORPGs), as petri dishes for the study of macroeconomic theories. / Thesis (BA) — Boston College, 2020. / Submitted to: Boston College. College of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Departmental Honors. / Discipline: Economics.
34

Distant Pasts Reimagined: Encountering the Political Present in 21st-Century Opera

Forner, Jane January 2020 (has links)
I focus on four operas premiered in Europe and the United States between 2009 and 2016 in which elements of the medieval, ritual, ancient, religious, and mystic emerge through their source material: _Adam and Eve: A Divine Comedy_ (2015, Norway), by Cecilie Ore and Bibbi Moslet; _Kalîla wa Dimna_ (2016, France), by Moneim Adwan and Fady Jomar; _Lilith_ (2009, USA) by Anthony Davis and Allan Havis, and _Paradise Reloaded (Lilith)_ (2013, Austria), by Peter Eötvös and Albert Ostermaier. This dissertation argues that these operas, rather than seeking a renaissance or rebirth of the mythic, draw inspiration and narratives from what I am calling “distant pasts,” reimagining universal or “timeless” narratives of humanity through a specific contemporary lens in an explicit and deliberate interrogation of the political present. Mapping out different modes of staging these distant pasts in response to cultural and political change in the twenty-first century, I suggest new modes of conceiving adaptable operatic “networks of comprehension” that encompass the multiple subject positions and geographical and cultural contexts that shape opera today. Each opera is presented as a case study in a single chapter, balancing musical analyses with political, historical, and cultural critique. Interviews with “stakeholders” (composers, librettists, singers, directors), many of which I conducted, form an integral part of this process. My analyses explore these four operas’ unconventional attitudes towards time, narrative, and drama, and in probing each opera’s idiosyncratic relationship with its distant pasts, I chart the complex manifestations of recent political discourse in Europe and the United States, especially concerning the intersection of feminism, race, religion, and secularism.
35

The Marriage of Adam and Eve: An Ancient Covenant

Benson, RoseAnn 01 January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
The metaphorical marriage, as described by the Old Testament prophets beginning with Hosea, symbolized the relationship of God the bridegroom, to israel his bride. This covenant relationship between God and Israel also symbolized the relationship God ordained between husband and wife. Literary structures, ritual patterns, and the Hebrew word which means "know" are common to ancient Near Eastern treaties and Old Testament covenants; most importantly, the marriage covenant. The marriage covenant is under the umbrella of previous covenants which a man and woman have entered into as part of the house of Israel. The terms "help meet" and "ruler" are the God-given roles to Adam and Eve which define the covenant relationship between husband and wife.
36

Vem är Eva? : Hur Eva och genussystemet har utvecklats i barnbiblar mellan 1940–2020. / Who is Eve? : How Eve and the Gender System Have Developed in Children’s Bibles Between 1940-2020.

Glemdal, Caroline January 2024 (has links)
This essay discusses gender systems in children’s bibles with narrative criticism and discourse analysis. The focus in the essay is on gender studies and how the stories in the children’s bibles change between 1940 to 2020. The children’s bibles used were published 1940, 1961, 1989, 1999 and 2020. The story of Adam and Eva is analyzed. The purpose for this essay is to find out how the gender system shows in these bible stories for children. What is feminine and what is masculine. What makes a woman and a man, what are their differences. How are Adam and Eve portrayed. With Hirdman’s (1988) gender system clear differences can be found. The stories tell of what female and male roles are and what they entail. The guilt of the fall of humanity always stays Eves, but how Eve is represented changes. Who Eve is changes. Eve goes from an extension of the man to a being of her own. The conclusion for this essay is that in the period between 1940-2020 there is a change to how Eve is portrayed. When the reader first meets Eve in the 1940 edition of the Children’s Bible, Eve is an extension of the man. Eve is naïve and her decision to go against God and eat the forbidden fruit is framed as her not knowing better. The next Children’s bible, published 1961, follows the same pattern. Both editions are heavy on details and closely follow the Bible. The third and fourth Children’s bible in the study, published 1989 and 1999, breaks this pattern. The story gets less detailed, and the authors are beginning to step away from Eve being naïve to Eve being curious. Noteworthy that the authors for the Children’s bibles published 1940 and 1960 are men, and the authors of Children’s bibles published 1989 and 1999 are women. From the first Children’s bible in the study to the last a vast difference can be seen. Adam and Eve are now created equally for the first time and the biggest change is in the illustration not the text. When Eve is talking with the snake about eating the forbidden fruit, in the right corner we can see another hand reaching out to the fruit. This may be Adam. In conclusion in this study Eve has gone dooming humanity by her naivety and Adam being smarter to Adam on his way to make the same decision maybe even before Eve.
37

An Annunciation for Today: The Use of Imagery of the Annunciation in Contemporary Art

Krugh, Laura A. 20 September 2011 (has links)
No description available.
38

The Distance between Two Worlds: What Happened to The Vagina Monologues When It Crossed The Pacific Ocean?

Lee, Jirye 11 September 2009 (has links)
No description available.
39

Visões do feminino: a criação de Eva nos mosteiros da Coimbra medieval (séculos XII-XIII) / View of the feminine figure: the Creation of Eve in the monasteries of medieval Coimbra (12th and 13th centuries)

Santos Neto, Regina Celia dos 14 March 2008 (has links)
O presente trabalho visa uma aproximação da sensibilidade medieval a respeito do tema da Criação de Eva a partir de códices iluminados, especialmente os presentes nos mosteiros portugueses mais importantes de Coimbra nos séculos XII e XIII. As tensões entre a carne e o espírito, o masculino e o feminino, elementos essenciais na mentalidade medieval serão abordados a partir das imagens e das discussões sobre a Criação e o Pecado e as vivências quotidianas pelos sentidos corporais, ajudando a compor, a partir das imagens, a visão polissêmica da figura feminina em Portugal medieval. / The present work approaches the medieval understanding of the theme of the Creation of Eve through the study of manuscript illuminations, and particularly those in the most important monasteries of Coimbra, in the Kingdom of Portugal, in the 12th and 13th Centuries. The tension between the flesh and the spirit, and between the masculine and the feminine essential elements of the medieval mentality- essential elements of the medieval mentality - will be explored based on images and debates related to Creation, Original Sin and the daily life as experienced through the senses, producing a polysemic view of the feminine figure in medieval Portugal.
40

Visões do feminino: a criação de Eva nos mosteiros da Coimbra medieval (séculos XII-XIII) / View of the feminine figure: the Creation of Eve in the monasteries of medieval Coimbra (12th and 13th centuries)

Regina Celia dos Santos Neto 14 March 2008 (has links)
O presente trabalho visa uma aproximação da sensibilidade medieval a respeito do tema da Criação de Eva a partir de códices iluminados, especialmente os presentes nos mosteiros portugueses mais importantes de Coimbra nos séculos XII e XIII. As tensões entre a carne e o espírito, o masculino e o feminino, elementos essenciais na mentalidade medieval serão abordados a partir das imagens e das discussões sobre a Criação e o Pecado e as vivências quotidianas pelos sentidos corporais, ajudando a compor, a partir das imagens, a visão polissêmica da figura feminina em Portugal medieval. / The present work approaches the medieval understanding of the theme of the Creation of Eve through the study of manuscript illuminations, and particularly those in the most important monasteries of Coimbra, in the Kingdom of Portugal, in the 12th and 13th Centuries. The tension between the flesh and the spirit, and between the masculine and the feminine essential elements of the medieval mentality- essential elements of the medieval mentality - will be explored based on images and debates related to Creation, Original Sin and the daily life as experienced through the senses, producing a polysemic view of the feminine figure in medieval Portugal.

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