Spelling suggestions: "subject:"1iterature – 20th century"" "subject:"cliterature – 20th century""
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The risus purus: laughter today in Beckett's Endgame and Pinter's The birthday party.January 2010 (has links)
Lee, Tin Yan Grace. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2010. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves [106-111]). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter Chapter 1: --- Laughter and Man --- p.15 / Chapter Chapter 2: --- Laughter and Man's Obligation to Persist in Beckett's Endgame --- p.37 / Chapter Chapter 3: --- Laughter and Self-Knowledge in Pinter's The Birthday Party --- p.68 / Conclusion --- p.100
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A generation 'betwixt and between': youth, gender and modernity in 1920s and 30s middlebrow women's writingJin, Xiaotian., 金小天. January 2010 (has links)
published_or_final_version / English / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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"Strangers in the house": twentieth century revisions of Irish literary and cultural identity / Twentieth century revisions of Irish literary and cultural identityHynes, Colleen Anne, 1978- 28 August 2008 (has links)
This thesis, Strangers in the House, illuminates how "strangers in the house"--unconventional women, Travellers, emigrants and immigrants--have made significant contributions to the evolving traditions of Irish literature and culture. I trace the literary and creative contributions of groups that were silenced during the early twentieth-century nation-building project to review the impact of the Irish Revival, from the politics of Arthur Griffith and Eamon de Valera to the writings of Yeats, Gregory and Synge, on the establishment of an "authentic" Irish identity. I draw on scholarship that establishes Ireland as a postcolonial nation, suggesting that contemporary identity is closely linked to the national, religious and gender expectations reinforced during the periods of colonialism and decolonization. My scholarship considers individuals who continue to be peripheral in the "reimagining" of what it means to be Irish in a post-Celtic Tiger, E.U. Ireland.
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The dialectical voice of Enrique Lihn and the metapoetics of twentieth-century Latin American literatureTravis, Christopher Michael 07 April 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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The male characters in the fiction of contemporary Taiwanese women writers李仕芬, Lee, Shi-fan. January 1997 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Chinese / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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The transformed pastoral in recent English-Canadian literatureStacey, Robert David January 1995 (has links)
This thesis examines the use of the pastoral form in recent Canadian literature. As the pastoral constitutes a literary site where a concern for landscape converges with a search for community, it has been employed as a myth in nationalist discourses whose functioning depend heavily on symbolized landscapes and idealized social types. The philosophical basis of the pastoral is the classical opposition between nature and culture. For this reason, its representations are often coded as 'natural'. To this extent, the pastoral participates in a hegemonic myth-making system, constituting a limited semiotic field in which certain representations are privileged while others are negated. Following Marx and Barthes, the thesis contends that an attack the nature/culture opposition is essential to undermining the hegemony of the myth-making process. In the context of nationalism, a pastoral can articulate a critique of dominant a 'naturalized' representations when it questions its own use of the nature/culture opposition.
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Stefan George und die "Kosmische Runde", 1897-1904 / Die "Kosmische Runde."Hoffmann, Helga January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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Postcolonial Welsh modernisms : ethnic performativity in Welsh writing of the late 19th and 20th centuries / Title on signature form: Postcolonial Welsh modernisms : ethic performativity in Welsh writing of the late 19th and 20th centuriesJones, Stephen Matthew 14 December 2013 (has links)
This project explores the ways in which several Welsh writers, and English writers of Welsh descent, respond to and reconstruct the related notions of Britishness and Welshness during the late 19th and 20th centuries. Gerard Manley Hopkins, Saunders Lewis, David Jones, and Kate Roberts each reveal nuances in perspective during this period in which the British Empire reached its peak and required popular justification for
doing so. Each author also participates in a form of Modernism, whether mainstream or specific to literary trends in Wales; in each case, such Modernisms are defined by an embracing of Welshness as an alternative to Anglocentric modernity. Through employing Judith Butler’s theory of performativity as it relates to ethnicity, this project contribute to
the fields of Postcolonial Theory and Welsh Studies through evaluating how these
authors construct and perform identity markers in the late 19th and 20th centuries for
political purposes. Applying these critical paradigms to the four authors shows how
constructions of ethnic identity serve political ends – particularly in relation to how
collective national identity responds, whether through resistance, participation or some
combination of the two, to the broader aims of the British Empire. / Department of English
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Problems of the documentary novel : the treatment of the Chaco War in Bolivian fictionGold, Peter J. January 1978 (has links)
The thesis examines Bolivian fiction written about the war with Paraguay (1932-35), known as the Chaco War. The study takes two different perspectives: the first considers the fiction as works of literature, and studies three major aspects of fictional writing: narrative organization, characterization arid figurative language, in order to investigate the constraints imposed upon writers who produce fiction about an historical event, (in this instance a military conflict). The second perspective views the works of fiction as historical documents and assesses their informative value by comparing factual information supplied in the novels with that provided in historiographical accounts and also by examining the kind of information which is the peculiar contribution of fiction to the understanding of an historical event. These two examinations are undertaken in Chapters V and VI respectively, and constitute the main body of the thesis. In order to place them in a wider context, the thesis considers previous critical studies of Chaco War fiction (in the Introduction). There follows a study of the relationship between the writing of contemporary history and documentary fiction (Chapter I), a brief summary of the Chaco War (Chapter II), an examination of some possible influences and precedents (Chapter III) and a survey of the writers and the works of Bolivian fiction of the Chaco War (Chapter IV). The conclusion suggests that the problems encountered by writers of documentary fiction are those faced by any naturalist writer, compounded here by the nature of the subject matter. If they cannot fully succeed on an artistic level, however, these works do provide a view of the historical facts of the war which is reasonably accurate. In addition they lead to a distinctive understanding of the war as an historical experience which no historiographical work can produce.
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Narrating (her)story : South African women’s life writing (1854-1948)Smit, Lizelle 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University. 2015 / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Seeking to explore modes of self-representation in women’s life writing and the ways in
which these subjects manipulate the autobiographical ‘I’ to write about gender, the body, race
and ethnic related issues, this thesis interrogates the autobiographies of three renegade women
whose works were birthed out of the de/colonial South African context between 1854-1948.
The chosen texts are: Marina King’s Sunrise to Evening Star: My Seventy Years in South
Africa (1935), Melina Rorke’s Melina Rorke: Her Amazing Experiences in the Stormy
Nineties of South-African History (1938), and two memoirs by Petronella van
Heerden, Kerssnuitsels (1962) and Die 16de Koppie (1965). My analysis is underpinned by
relevant life writing and feminist criticism, such as the notion of female autobiographical
“embodiment” (239) and the ‘I’s reliance on “relationality” (248) as discussed in the work of
Sidonie Smith and Julia Watson (Reading Autobiography). I further draw on Judith Butler’s
concept of “performativity” (Bodies that Matter 234) in my analysis in order to suggest that
there is a performative aspect to the female ‘I’ in these texts. The aim of this thesis is to
illustrate how these self-representations of women can be read as counter-conventional,
speaking out against stereotypical perceptions and conventions of their time and in literatures
(fiction and criticism) which cast women as tractable, compliant pertaining to patriarchal
oversight, as narrow-minded and apathetic regarding achieving notoriety and prominence
beyond their ascribed position in their separate societies. I argue that these works are
representative of alternative female subjectivities and are examples of South African women’s
life writing which lie ‘dusty’ and forgotten in archives; voices that are worthy of further
scholarly research which would draw the stories of women’s lives back into the literary
consciousness. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: In ‘n poging om metodes van self-uitbeelding te bespreek en die manier waarop die ‘ek’ van
vroulike ego-tekste manipuleer om sodoende te skryf oor geslagsrolle, die liggaam, ras en
ander etniese kwessies, ondersoek hierdie verhandeling die outbiografieë van drie
onkonvensionele vrouens se werk, gebore vanuit die de/koloniale konteks in Suid-Afrika
tussen 1854-1948. Die ego-tekste wat in hierdie navorsingstuk ondersoek word, sluit in:
Marina King se Sunrise to Evening Star: My Seventy Years in South Africa (1935), Melina
Rorke se Melina Rorke: Her Amazing Experiences in the Stormy Nineties of South-African
History (1938), en twee memoirs geskryf deur Petronella van Heerden, Kerssnuitsels (1962)
en Die 16de Koppie (1965). My analise word ondersteun deur relevante kritici van
feministiese en outobiografiese velde. Ek bespreek onder andere die idee dat die vroulike ‘ek’
liggaamlik “vergestalt” (239) is in outobiografie, asook die ‘ek’ se afhanklikheid van
“relasionaliteit” (248) soos uiteengesit in die werk van Sidonie Smith en Julia Watson
(Reading Autobiography). Verder stel ek voor, met verwysing na Judith Butler, dat daar ‘n
“performative” (Bodies that Matter 234) aspek na vore kom in die vroulike ‘ek’ van Suid-
Afrikaanse outobiografie. Die doel van hierdie tesis is om uit te lig dat hierdie selfvoorstellings
van vroue gelees kan word as kontra-konvensioneel; dat die stereotipiese
uitbeelding van vroue as skroomhartig, nougeset, gedweë ten opsigte van patriargale oorsig,
en willoos om meer te vermag as wat hul onderskeie gemeenskappe vir hul voorskryf,
weerspreek word deur hierdie ego-tekste. Die doel is om sodanige outobiografiese vertellings
en -uitbeeldings te vergelyk en sodoende uiteenlopende vroulike subjektiwiteite gedurende
die periode 1854-1948 te belig. Ek verwys deurlopend na voorbeelde van ander
gemarginaliseerde Suid-Afrikaanse vroulike ego-tekse om aan te dui dat daar weliswaar ‘n
magdom ‘vergete’ en ‘stof-bedekte’ vrouetekste geskryf is in die afgebakende periode. Ek
voor aan dat die ‘stem’ van die vroulike ‘ek’ allermins stagneer het, en dat verdere
bestudering waarskynlik nodig is.
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