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Tea Parties, Fairy Dust, and Cultural Memory: The Maintenance and Development of <i>Alice in Wonderland</i> and <i>Peter Pan</i> Over TimeKim, Jeena 16 July 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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<i>Priest of Wisdom</i>: A Historical Novel Studying Ancient Greek Culture through Creative WritingDorsten, Sara E. 07 May 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Salomo syn oue goudfelde : op die spoor van die retorika in die Afrikaanse romankunsVan Zyl, Dorothea Petronella 11 1900 (has links)
Text in Afrikaans / Hoewel die retorika bykans 26 eeue oud is, word die relevansie daarvan vir ons
eie tyd toenemend besef - as 'n sleutel tot die wyse waarop mense dinkargumenteer en oorreed. Hierdie studie ondersoek retoriese (oorredende)
strategiee in Afrikaanse historiese romantekste, binne 'n historiese konteks en
teen die agtergrond van eietydse historiografiese insigte. Die aspekte van die
kommunikasiesituasie wat saamhang met die retorika, word verbind met die
vernuwende denke daaroor binne die hedendaagse literatuurteorie en
historiografie. Die konteks van die outeur en roman word telkens bestudeer,
gevolg deur 'n retoriese analise. Aristoteles se idees oor die retorika kry hierby
voorrang, vanwee sy nadruk op die inventio of vinding, maar die retorika word
eerder geassosieer met 'n dinamiese metode as met rigiede kategorisering.
Aandag word veral bestee aan retoriese strategies in S.J. du Toit se Di
koningin fan Skeba (1898) en Andre P. Brink se Houd-den-bek (1982), maar
ook aan resente historiese romans wat hedendaagse historiografiese en
retoriese opvattinge en konvensies ontgin en problematiseer. Beide S.J. du Toit,
wat kennelik 'n goeie kennis van die antieke retorika gehad het en Andre P.
Brink, met sy romanonderwerp wat aansluit by die geregtelike rede, betree die
retoriese terrain op sodanige wyse dat hul romans tipiese produkte van hul eie
tyd genoem kan word.
Beide die geskiedskrywing en die historiese roman is gemedieerde
weergawes, gekenmerk deur 'n subjektiewe seleksie (inventio) van gegewens
en die kombinasie daarvan binne eie verbale strukture (dispositio). Dit kan in
verband gebring word met nie-tegniese oorredingsmiddele, waar die sender sy
informasie van buite kry. Hy gebruik dan sogenaamde empiries-verifieerbare
feite as retoriese strategie ten einde 'n waarheids- en I of werklikheidsillusie te
skep wat bydra tot die roman se oorredingsskrag. Die keuse vir die skryf van 'n
historiese roman, impliseer reeds ook 'n keuse vir die bakens van die
geskiedskrywing, maar 'n skeppende skrywer is, anders as 'n historikus, eties
vry om nie-tegniese bewysmiddele te transformeer tot tegniese bewysmiddele,
in aanpassing by 'n nuutgeskepte argumentatio en 'n eie causa. Na aanleiding
van die tekste kom die ontvanger op sy beurt tot 'n eie seleksie en skep sy eie
kousale en argumentatiewe strukture / While rhetoric has been part of the history of mankind for nearly 26 centuries, it
is increasingly regarded as extremely relevant for our time - as a key to the way
in which people think, argue and persuade. This study investigates rhetorical
(persuasive) strategies in Afrikaans historical novels. The novels and their
authors are first situated in their historical contexts and against the background
of contemporary historiographical inquiry, and then analyzed by means of
rhetorical concepts. Aspects of communication, which coincide with rhetorical
categories, are combined with recent developments in the field of literary theory
and historiography. Aristotle's views on persuasion and rhetoric are used as
point of departure, but rhetoric is regarded as a dynamic method rather than a
rigid categorization.
Attention is given to rhetorical strategies in the novel Di konlngin fan Skeba
[The queen of Sheba] by S.J. du Toit (1898) and Andre P. Brink's Houd-denbek
[translated into English by the author as A chain of voices], but also to
recent Afrikaans historical novels which exploit contemporary historiographical
and rhetorical conventions. In S.J. du Toit's novel (which illustrates his
knowledge of ancient rhetoric) as well as Andre P. Brink's (where the topic can
be linked to litigation) rhetorical strategies are employed in such a manner that
their texts can be regarded as products of their historical contexts.
Both historiography and historical novels are mediated representations,
characterized by a subjective selection (inventio) of data and its combination in
verbal structures (dispositio). This can be related to 'extrinsic' or 'inartificial'
proofs, which are not contrived by the author. The author exploits the so-called
empirically verifiable facts as rhetorical strategies to create an illusion of truth or
verisimilitude, which greatly contributes to the persuasiveness of the novel. The
decision to write a historical novel implies a choice to keep to the historical
'facts', but the writer, in contrast to the historiographer, is ethically free to
transform the inartificial proofs into artificial proofs, in combination with his own
invented argumentatio and causa. Prompted by these texts the reader, in his
turn, makes his own selection and creates his own causal and argumentative
structures / Afrikaans & Theory of Literature / D. Litt. et Phil. (Afrikaans)
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"Wizards of the West" : filiations, reprises, mutations de la romance historique de Sir Walter Scott à ses contemporains américains, 1814-1840 (James Fenimore Cooper, Washington Irving et Catharine Maria Sedgwick) / “Wizards of the West”. Inheritance and Transformation of the Historical Romance from Sir Walter Scott to his American Contemporaries, 1814-1840s (James Fenimore Cooper, Washington Irving, and Catharine Maria Sedgwick)Pilote, Pauline 01 December 2017 (has links)
Cette étude se place dans le champ des études transatlantiques afin d’analyser les modalités selon lesquelles les romances historiques ont constitué une réponse aux exigences lancinantes de doter les États-Unis d’une littérature nationale dans la première moitié du XIXe siècle. Créé en Grande-Bretagne par Walter Scott, ce genre est repris et adapté par ses contemporains américains, en particulier James Fenimore Cooper, Washington Irving et Catharine Maria Sedgwick. Dans un premier temps, nous avons étudié la réception de Walter Scott et de ses Waverley Novels et leur impact sur le marché du livre américain. Une analyse, notamment, des journaux qui fleurissent lors du regain de patriotisme de l’après-Guerre de 1812, a permis de montrer que se côtoient alors panégyriques de Walter Scott et appels récurrents à l’émergence d’un « Scott américain ». C’est ensuite la réponse des auteurs américains que nous avons étudiée. S’ils adoptent certains codes génériques scottiens afin de répondre à la volonté nationale de mettre en scène l’Histoire américaine, Cooper, Irving et Sedgwick font de leurs romances historiques le vecteur privilégié d’une mise en valeur de la matière américaine : une Histoire riche en événements, des ancêtres à célébrer, un territoire national aux propriétés spécifiques, qui la mettront sur un pied d’égalité avec les nations européennes. Alors que les romanciers utilisent leurs œuvres pour promouvoir une nation américaine culturellement distincte, s’opère une recomposition générique. La romance historique se fait alors le lieu d’une mythogenèse pour l’Amérique via l’écriture d’une épopée nationale, qui permet de remonter les âges vers une temporalité indéfinie afin de fonder la Jeune République en une nation organique, digne de soutenir la comparaison avec ses homologues outre-Atlantique. / This work, belonging to the field of transatlantic studies, analyses to what extend historical romances formed a response to the ongoing wish to provide the United States with a national literature in the first half of the nineteenth century. The genre, fashioned in Great Britain by Walter Scott, was taken up and adapted by his American contemporaries, and in particular, James Fenimore Cooper, Washington Irving, and Catharine Maria Sedgwick. The first chapter tackles the reception of Walter Scott and of his Waverley Novels, and their impact on the American book market. Our analysis in particular of the newspapers and periodicals that flourished in the surge of patriotism following the War of 1812, has enabled us to show that the panegyrics for Walter Scott stood just alongside the recurrent calls in the same pages for the birth of an “American Scott.” The response given by the American authors forms the second part of our analysis. As they appropriate some of the generic traits of the Scottian historical romance in order to comply to the nation’s wish for a portrayal of American history, Cooper, Irving, and Sedgwick use the genre to showcase the American matter – a history full of events worth narrating, ancestors worth celebrating, and a national territory with its own features – that would bring the United States on a level with the European nations. As the writers thus promote a culturally distinct American nation, the genre gradually morphs into a form of national epic. Through this mythogenesis at work in the writings under study, the United States are given a timeline that dissolves into an indeterminate temporality, thereby shaping the Early Republic as an organic nation, fit for contention with its transatlantic counterparts.
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The dryland diaries2014 September 1900 (has links)
The Dryland Diaries is a multigenerational narrative in the epistolary style, a tale of four women, central character Luka; her mother Lenore; grandmother Charlotte; and great-grandmother Annie – cast in the Quebecoise tradition of the roman du terroir, invoking place and family, the primal terroir of a storyteller. The novel is driven by three acts of violence – the possible murder of Annie’s husband, Jordan, by her Hutterite father; the rape of Charlotte; and the probable murder of Lenore by a notorious serial killer. Set in rural Saskatchewan and Vancouver, Luka, a single mother, finds Annie’s and Charlotte’s journals in the basement of her farm home, where both her predecessors also lived. She reads their stories while attempting to come to terms with her search for her missing mother, and with her attraction to her former flame, Earl, now married. Luka learns that Jordan disappeared shortly after the Canadian government enacted conscription for farmers in the First World War, when Annie became a stud horsewoman, her daughter Charlotte born before the war ended. Letters and newspaper clippings trace the family’s life through the drought and Great Depression; then Charlotte’s diaries reveal her rape at Danceland during the Second World War. Her daughter, Lenore, grows up off-balance emotionally, and abandons her daughters. Luka returns to Vancouver and learns her mother’s fate. Told from Luka’s point of view, in first-person narrative with intercutting diary excerpts and third-person narratives, the novel examines how violence percolates through generations. It also examines how mothers influence their children, the role of art, how the natural world influences a life, and questions our definition of “home.” At its heart, the novel is a story about what makes a family a family, about choices we make toward happiness, and about how violence perpetuates itself through the generations. Inspired by Margaret Lawrence’s The Stone Angel, Carol Shields’ The Stone Diaries, and the place-particular writing of Annie Proulx and Guy Vanderhaeghe, The Dryland Diaries paints a family portrait of loss, hope and redemption, locating it on the boundaries of historical fiction, firmly within the realm of epistolary and intergenerational narrative.
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"Alptraum: Deutschland" Traumversionen und Traumvisionen vom "Dritten Reich"Lux, Nadja January 2008 (has links)
Zugl.: Diss.
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History in the making : Metafiktion im neueren anglokanadischen historischen Roman /Bölling, Gordon. January 2006 (has links)
Teilw. zugl.: Köln, Universiẗat, Diss., 2004.
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Bien se souvenir : représentation de la violence politique et de la mort dans La Constellation du Lynx, de Louis Hamelin, suivi de La vingt-troisième nuit, romanCollinge-Loysel, Clarence 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Salomo syn oue goudfelde : op die spoor van die retorika in die Afrikaanse romankunsVan Zyl, Dorothea Petronella 11 1900 (has links)
Text in Afrikaans / Hoewel die retorika bykans 26 eeue oud is, word die relevansie daarvan vir ons
eie tyd toenemend besef - as 'n sleutel tot die wyse waarop mense dinkargumenteer en oorreed. Hierdie studie ondersoek retoriese (oorredende)
strategiee in Afrikaanse historiese romantekste, binne 'n historiese konteks en
teen die agtergrond van eietydse historiografiese insigte. Die aspekte van die
kommunikasiesituasie wat saamhang met die retorika, word verbind met die
vernuwende denke daaroor binne die hedendaagse literatuurteorie en
historiografie. Die konteks van die outeur en roman word telkens bestudeer,
gevolg deur 'n retoriese analise. Aristoteles se idees oor die retorika kry hierby
voorrang, vanwee sy nadruk op die inventio of vinding, maar die retorika word
eerder geassosieer met 'n dinamiese metode as met rigiede kategorisering.
Aandag word veral bestee aan retoriese strategies in S.J. du Toit se Di
koningin fan Skeba (1898) en Andre P. Brink se Houd-den-bek (1982), maar
ook aan resente historiese romans wat hedendaagse historiografiese en
retoriese opvattinge en konvensies ontgin en problematiseer. Beide S.J. du Toit,
wat kennelik 'n goeie kennis van die antieke retorika gehad het en Andre P.
Brink, met sy romanonderwerp wat aansluit by die geregtelike rede, betree die
retoriese terrain op sodanige wyse dat hul romans tipiese produkte van hul eie
tyd genoem kan word.
Beide die geskiedskrywing en die historiese roman is gemedieerde
weergawes, gekenmerk deur 'n subjektiewe seleksie (inventio) van gegewens
en die kombinasie daarvan binne eie verbale strukture (dispositio). Dit kan in
verband gebring word met nie-tegniese oorredingsmiddele, waar die sender sy
informasie van buite kry. Hy gebruik dan sogenaamde empiries-verifieerbare
feite as retoriese strategie ten einde 'n waarheids- en I of werklikheidsillusie te
skep wat bydra tot die roman se oorredingsskrag. Die keuse vir die skryf van 'n
historiese roman, impliseer reeds ook 'n keuse vir die bakens van die
geskiedskrywing, maar 'n skeppende skrywer is, anders as 'n historikus, eties
vry om nie-tegniese bewysmiddele te transformeer tot tegniese bewysmiddele,
in aanpassing by 'n nuutgeskepte argumentatio en 'n eie causa. Na aanleiding
van die tekste kom die ontvanger op sy beurt tot 'n eie seleksie en skep sy eie
kousale en argumentatiewe strukture / While rhetoric has been part of the history of mankind for nearly 26 centuries, it
is increasingly regarded as extremely relevant for our time - as a key to the way
in which people think, argue and persuade. This study investigates rhetorical
(persuasive) strategies in Afrikaans historical novels. The novels and their
authors are first situated in their historical contexts and against the background
of contemporary historiographical inquiry, and then analyzed by means of
rhetorical concepts. Aspects of communication, which coincide with rhetorical
categories, are combined with recent developments in the field of literary theory
and historiography. Aristotle's views on persuasion and rhetoric are used as
point of departure, but rhetoric is regarded as a dynamic method rather than a
rigid categorization.
Attention is given to rhetorical strategies in the novel Di konlngin fan Skeba
[The queen of Sheba] by S.J. du Toit (1898) and Andre P. Brink's Houd-denbek
[translated into English by the author as A chain of voices], but also to
recent Afrikaans historical novels which exploit contemporary historiographical
and rhetorical conventions. In S.J. du Toit's novel (which illustrates his
knowledge of ancient rhetoric) as well as Andre P. Brink's (where the topic can
be linked to litigation) rhetorical strategies are employed in such a manner that
their texts can be regarded as products of their historical contexts.
Both historiography and historical novels are mediated representations,
characterized by a subjective selection (inventio) of data and its combination in
verbal structures (dispositio). This can be related to 'extrinsic' or 'inartificial'
proofs, which are not contrived by the author. The author exploits the so-called
empirically verifiable facts as rhetorical strategies to create an illusion of truth or
verisimilitude, which greatly contributes to the persuasiveness of the novel. The
decision to write a historical novel implies a choice to keep to the historical
'facts', but the writer, in contrast to the historiographer, is ethically free to
transform the inartificial proofs into artificial proofs, in combination with his own
invented argumentatio and causa. Prompted by these texts the reader, in his
turn, makes his own selection and creates his own causal and argumentative
structures / Afrikaans and Theory of Literature / D. Litt. et Phil. (Afrikaans)
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The interface of history and fiction in Russel Brownlee’s Garden of the plagues, Ingrid Winterbach’s To hell With Cronjé, and Etienne van Heerden’s The long silence of Mario SalviatiWyrill, Beth Alexandra January 2014 (has links)
Both historiographical and literary practices have undergone revision in recent years in attempting to address the inheritance of nineteenth-century realism. Since the object of realist stylistics, employed in both the writing of fiction and history, is to render authorship authoritative or even invisible, the ideological import of these narratives is often such that the constructedness of the historical record and its absences are veiled. In developments beginning in the 1980s with the advent of ‘New Historicism’ and with the emergence of postmodern literary techniques, the interface of literature and history became of seminal importance, since both were now credited as being products of narrative and discourse, and hence, to varying degrees, of the literary imagination. This movement intersects interestingly with developments in postcolonial studies, since it is the voices of the marginalized and disempowered colonized peoples that are routinely co-opted and excised from nineteenth-century realist histories. These concerns are now being fully explored in the literature of the contemporary post-transitional South African moment, since authors in this country seemingly now feel freed up to look back to histories that precede the immediate traumas of apartheid. The concern, in relation to apartheid developments but also on a broader universal scale, is this: if history is viewed as perpetual emergences of modernities, then one of the great absences in the record is the historical determinants of any given epistemology. The attempt to recreate such an epistemological genealogy is thus simultaneously postcolonial, historiographical, and literary. Russel Brownlee’s Garden of the Plagues (2005), Ingrid Winterbach’s To Hell with Cronjé (2010), and Etienne van Heerden’s The Long Silence of Mario Salviati (2002) attempt to bridge this gap in the recorded sensibilities of any historical moment by representing a ‘lived experience’ of the past, and in the process imaginatively recreating the cultural, historical and psychological locations of the proponents of an emerging modernity. This study concerns itself with the ways in which these authors address the influence of realist historiography through the use of literary innovations that allow for the departure from realist stylistics. Most commonly, all three authors draw on forms of magic realism, but multiple refigurings and recombinations of notions of temporality, narrative, and characterization likewise work to defamiliarize the once stable discourse of history.
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