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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.
201

La relacion entre la fisionomia y el caracter de los personajes en "Don Quijote de la Mancha"

Unknown Date (has links)
This dissertation attempts to determine the physiognomical characteristics of the main characters in Cervantes' Don Quixote, in particular of the hero, Sancho Panza, Aldonza/Dulcinea, Don Quixote's horse Rocinante, and Sancho's donkey. This is achieved by comparing the characters' tangible and intangible attributes to those established by books on physiognomy available to Cervantes, especially Juan Huarte de San Juan's Examen de ingenios, Alfonso Martinez de Toledo's Corbacho; and Jeronimo Cortes' Libro de fisionomia natural, of which an edition of the first 31 chapters appears in the appendix. Close analysis of the descriptions of the physical appearance and emotional reactions of the aforesaid characters indicates that Don Quixote exhibits a choleric nature throughout the novel, except for the final chapters of each Part, when his hot and dry nature cools to a melancholic state. Sancho Panza, on the other hand, is eternally sanguine (hot and wet). The two protagonists' steeds are both phlegmatic, although they often participate in the physiognomic characteristics of their masters. Aldonza/Dulcinea, curiously, is the humoral equivalent of the particular imagination that embodies her, and so shifts physiognomy throughout the novel. In all these cases, Cervantes followed unerringly the prevailing beliefs of his time concerning physical appearance and character. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 53-03, Section: A, page: 0828. / Major Professor: David H. Darst. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1992.
202

The archetype of Christ in the works of Albert Camus and Antoine de Saint-Exupery

Unknown Date (has links)
This study focuses on the Christ archetype as manifested in the works of two twentieth century French authors: Albert Camus and Antoine de Saint-Exupery. The Christ archetype is treated as a primordial image that transcends time, history, and religion. / As representatives of the crisis of the bourgeoisie in the first half of this century both writers repudiate traditional religious convictions. The existentialist philosophy of the absurd propagates the belief that God is irrelevant, or indifferent to the life of man. Modern man, feeling abandoned and alienated is forced to develop a new consciousness of self, one that recognizes a new yet problematic freedom that places full responsibility on the individual. In the absence of a saving deity man must find a terrestrial savior. In spite of divergent and at times opposing philosophies, the archetypal approach nonetheless demonstrates that Camus and Saint-Exupery share common ground in the belief that man's certain and final mortality notwithstanding, man must become his own Christ. Both writers exhibit an appreciation for the christian virtues of charity, fraternity and sacrifice. The human savior, acknowledging the futility of his task, must persevere, for through his actions he revolts against a senseless human condition. / Herein lies man's greatness and the basis for the Christ archetype. Through his indefatigable efforts man transcends his condition while remaining firmly entrenched in his human but courageous struggle for life. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 52-08, Section: A, page: 2943. / Major Professor: Victor Carrabino. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1991.
203

MAIN THEMES AND CHARACTERS IN THE WORKS OF GONZALO TORRENTE BALLESTER (SPAIN)

Unknown Date (has links)
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 32-09, Section: A, page: 5242. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1971.
204

Laughing at the past: Subversive humor in the Spanish picaresque and its cultural context

Brunette-Lopez, Danny January 2003 (has links)
In picaresque fiction, subversive humor is related to genre, thematic unity, narrator/protagonists' points of view, and it illustrates fictionalized reality that is linked to contemporaneous culture and society. In this dissertation, I employ theories on humor---superiority, incongruity, release, and entropic---to study humorous episodes in Lazarillo de Tormes (1554), Guzman de Alfarache (1599, 1604) and El buscon (1626). Chapter one provides an overview of theories on humor, beginning with Plato and Aristotle and including modern theorists such as Victor Raskin, Marvin Koller and Patrick O'Neill. The superiority theory begins with Plato and Aristotle and acquires popularity in the seventeenth century with the philosophers Thomas Hobbes and Rene Descartes. The incongruity theory, which treats playful humor, originates in the eighteenth century with philosophers such as Francis Hutcheson, James Beattie and Emmanuel Kant. This theory is also associated with black humor that combines violent extremes of horror and humor and causes people to become both horrified and amused. The release theory, which emanates from Freud's ideas on psychoanalysis relates to an individual's release of forbidden thoughts, inhibitions and anxieties. O'Neill's entropic humor theory, which is related to satire, irony and parody, erodes truths and certainty and exposes the disruption of ordered systems. Henri Bergson's study of laughter functions as a social corrective while Mikhail Bakhtin's view of carnivalesque laughter signifies the symbolic destruction of authority and official culture. Chapter two studies the entropic narrator in Lazarillo de Tormes and the ways in which humor reflects a breakdown of traditional perceptions of reality, the crumbling of ordered systems and the erosion of truth and certainty related to sixteenth-century Spain. Chapter three analyzes four types of humor in Guzman de Alfarache that deal with social and moral dishonesty, horror and humor and literary vengeance. Chapter four treats grotesque black humor in the Buscon that relates to death, gallows humor (galgenhumour), cannibalism and the mutilation of a human corpse (reductio ad absurdum). Subversive humor in picaresque fiction conceptualizes reality that is linked to thematic unity, points of view and the poetics of culture and environment of Spanish society during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
205

Milton's rite of passage: The function of form in the Italian sonnets

Fortier, John R., 1950- January 1996 (has links)
John Milton's Italian sonnets are more significant than they are generally thought to be. In spite of attempts to revive interest in them, they are among the poet's least valued works. In this dissertation, I demonstrate that the practices of publishing the sonnets out of their original order and including English translations along side of the original Italian alter readings of the sonnets by altering their context. These practices are largely responsible for the sonnets' poor reception. In addition to being altered by editorial practices and translations, the context in which the sonnets are received has been altered by changing views about Milton's biography. The present study, therefore, also involves an examination of the way biographical studies can affect interpretation. Reading the poems in their original order and considering their arrangement as purposeful and artistic expands the possibilities for interpretation. My particular reading of the sonnet sequence reveals Milton's self-conscious, retrospective portrayal of a rite of passage in which he prepares to assume a mature and public role. The sonnets show that new understandings of religious and secular love motivate the poet to represent his views in a public form. In his presentation and arrangement of Sonnets 1-7, the poet translates personal conflict into social and political action, and he uses the interplay of tbe English and Italian languages and traditions to dramatize his relationship and responsibility to his native land and the world at large.
206

Counter-Reformation politics and the Inquisition in the works of Fray Luis de Leon

Fulton, Joseph Michael January 1999 (has links)
Fray Luis de Leon was incarcerated for nearly five years by the Spanish Inquisition, on the basis of charges brought against him by antagonistic colleagues who disagreed with his scholarly approach. Through a systematic consideration of his writings in light of the sociohistorical climate that gave rise to disputes between him and his detractors, it is evident that a number of themes run through Fray Luis' prose production which can be related directly to his experience as an inmate in the Inquisition's cells. These topoi, found throughout the Salmantine friar's prose, are present also in his poetry. Therefore, by analyzing those prose passages that have a direct bearing on his trial before the Inquisition and by relating those passages to his poetry, we shall gain access to unique avenues of interpretation. The results will offer new insights into Fray Luis' poetry that are not readily apparent through other methods of analysis. This study will afford us an opportunity to see Fray Luis and his works in great detail from a perspective that has not yet been explored.
207

"The Plague" in Albert Camus's fiction

Ast, Bernard Edward Jr., 1963- January 1998 (has links)
This dissertation catalogues and examines Albert Camus's thematic repetitiveness as seen in his fiction and in how this repetitiveness relates to the world view presented in the so-called guillotine passage in his novel The Plague: that the world consists of scourges, victims, and an elusive third domain. A scourge can be an aggressor. It causes suffering and even death. The plague and other infirmities, both physical and mental, are aggressors. They are indiscriminate, merciless, and oftentimes deadly. Tyrants, too, are aggressors, some of which cling to the arbitrary, while others have a considerably more formal agenda. An aggressor can be metaphysical: the inner plague. Some aggressors, Like poverty and the climate, can also have a positive side to them. A scourge can also be an aggression--what the aggressor causes. They usually cannot be justified (existential separation, death, murder, execution, suicide), but some aggressions lead to enlightenment or positive change (exile, imprisonment, separation from loved ones). Yet one aggression, solitude of a certain kind, can actually be a desired and pleasant experience. Victims are the second domain. Camus focuses primarily on children, artists, clergy, judges and lawyers. The first three groups are presented in a balanced fashion, with emphasis on both the positive and the negative. Judges and lawyers are presented in a negative light, with only slight deviations. The third domain consists of true doctors (true friends) and peace/happiness, with true doctors--who are not necessarily doctors--contributing to the attainment of happiness or at least an improvement in circumstances. Light, the sea, other aspects of nature and sensual pleasures can also contribute to finding peace/happiness.
208

Ramon Perez de Ayala: Autor humoristico

Ayo, Alvaro A. January 1999 (has links)
En esta disertacion mostramos que Ramon Perez de Ayala es un autor humoristico, es decir, un autor que se aproxima al mundo tanto criticamente como de modo tolerante y afectivo. El impetu critico lo impulsa a escudrinar su entorno y a desvelar lo que se halla tras lo aparente. Su postura tolerante lo ayuda a comprender las contradicciones que percibe y a preconizar que todo y todos tienen algo que aportar al mundo, donde el observa la armonia caudalosa, concepto que explica la presencia de todas las ideas y las personalidades, infinitamente enfrentadas entre si. Su arte constituye un intento de recrear este estado de "armonia desarmonica", como se aprecia en la riqueza de personajes conflictivos, incongruentes e imprevisibles que crea. Para explicar la manera en que Ayala se aproxima al mundo y al arte, en base a sus ideas y a las que Luigi Pirandello vierte en L'umorismo , configuramos la nocion de acercamiento humoristico . Esta se apuntala en la distincion entre dos conceptos: lo comico, que se refiere a las discrepancias que se revelan a raiz del escudrinamiento critico del mundo y el humorismo, que es la tolerancia de las discrepancias, nacida de la observacion critica. Nuestra nocion consta de dos fases. En la primera, dominada por lo comico, se escudrina a las personas. Surge la risa. El humorismo predomina en la segunda fase, en que se llega a comprender el origen de las contradicciones que se percibe. La risa da paso a una sonrisa cervantina--confortadora y comprensiva. Mediante el estudio del acercamiento humoristico intentamos ofrecer una imagen de Perez de Ayala diferente a la del rigido moralizador que predomina en la critica.
209

Sade-omizing sexuality| Deconstructing the gender binary through the Sadian sexual predator

Lawrence, Jennifer Lee 01 October 2013 (has links)
<p> The Marquis de Sade became famous, or infamous depending on one's perspective, for the ferocious depictions of sexual predation which are found throughout his literary works, and consequently, the character of the sexual predator is indispensable to understanding the author's philosophical standpoint. For Sade, the laws of nature determine the sex of the individual, but they also require him or her to satisfy a set of physical needs which reject the masculine/feminine binary as often as they embrace it. This blurring of the lines between masculinity and femininity is thus characteristic of the Sadian sexual predator who must constantly seek satisfaction for his needs regardless of social and religious constraints on his behavior and on the sex of his victim. When examining the myriad variations on this character in Sade's work, it becomes clear that he has transferred the natural law of &ldquo;survival of the fittest&rdquo; from a purely physical to a highly intellectual concept and, in so doing, has created a predator who uses mental as well as physical strength to dominate his victim. I, therefore, propose that masculinity mixes fluidly with femininity when examined through the lens of the predator and that by investigating the hierarchy of predator versus prey, the mutability of gender at both extremes of the predatory relationship, and the description of specific acts of predation, it is possible to deconstruct the gender differences through the strict adherence to the laws of nature observed by Sade's sexual predators.</p>
210

Le Cardinal de Retz et ses "Memoires": Etude de caracterologie litteraire

de Mendoza, Bernadette Barrio January 1971 (has links)
This study is an experiment in the application of the science of characterology to literary study. The methods of characterological research have been applied to the principal works of an author in an attempt to discover his true character and the impulses underlying his behaviour. The Memoirs of the Cardinal de Retz, being autobiographical, served this purpose particularly well. The introduction explains the methods of characterology and their advantages. It also gives a brief historical background of this science and defines the terms which will be used in the course of the study. Part One, Chapter One investigates the author's inherent psychological structure, i.e. "le caractere." Our analysis reveals that Retz falls into the "sanguin" category, i.e. a "non-Emotif-Actif-Primaire." As a "non-Emotif," he never loses his composure and is capable of a great presence of mind, two qualities which permitted him to excel in the field of diplomacy. Like most "actifs," Retz possesses a strong vital energy, an ability to make quick and right decisions, and a reliable, practical sense. Despite a strong determination, Retz presents the characteristics of a "Primaire," a person who obeys momentary impulses rather than being influenced by deep-rooted and lasting impressions. Chapter Two studies the main tendencies which acted upon Retz's character: his "polarite Mars" which, enhanced by a narrow "champ de conscience," led him to want to dominate others: his quest for intellectual pursuits paralleled by a keen intelligence and a remarkable memory. In Part Two, we have considered the influence of heredity, of intellectual formation, of environment and of the times on the individual's innate character. Part Three gives a general survey and an evaluation of Retz's "psychodialectique," the use he made of his idiosyncrasies and his efforts to compensate and remedy the weaknesses of his personality. In his autobiographical works he projects the image of a would-be self whom he tries to emulate. His mode of existence followed the dynamic dictates of his "Activite-Primarite," making his life a series of adventures in search of his ideal of glory. At the conclusion of his life, he seems satisfied that he had attained his goal and realized the potentialities of his character.

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