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Fictions and forced forgetfulness in the plays of Edward Albee during the long 1960sVyas, Divyansh 08 1900 (has links)
Ce mémoire explore comment Edward Albee peut être perçu comme un postmoderniste,
s’appuyant sur une compréhension du postmodernisme formulée par Linda Hutcheon et le
contexte américain pendant les longues années 1960 pour examiner de façon critique deux des
premières pièces d’Albee. Les pièces en question, The Zoo Story (1959) et Who’s Afraid of
Virginia Woolf? (1962), dépeignent des personnages qui ne peuvent supporter la ligne floue
entre les faits et la fiction de la condition postmoderne, où il n’y a pas de motifs ou de vérités
incontestables. Le besoin désespéré de vivre dans la certitude absolue et l’assurance fait que
les personnages nient la condition postmoderne, et s’engagent dans un processus d’oubli forcé
de leur appréhension de la condition postmoderne et des différents événements qui les ont
amenés à elle. Les personnages des deux pièces utilisent différents métarécits pour créer un
sens et vivre leur vie avec l’illusion de la certitude complète. Le processus de l’oubli forcé sera
déduit à travers les théories de la mémoire et de l’oubli tel que compris et expliqué par Jonathan
K. Foster. Le mémoire démontre comment, en raison de leur cartographie de toute leur vie sur
la base de différentes métanarrations, les personnages finissent par vivre d’une manière aliénée
et inauthentique. L’état apathique et émasculé de leurs identités les font se livrer à des actes
extrêmes de violence et de rage. Albee montre comment les identités de ses personnages sont
compromises de différentes façons en subissant leur mort sociale. / This thesis explores how Edward Albee can be perceived as a postmodernist, relying on an
understanding of postmodernism formulated by Linda Hutcheon and the American context
during the long 1960s to critically scrutinize two of Albee’s early plays. The plays in question,
The Zoo Story (1959) and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1962), portray characters who
cannot bear the blurred line between fact and fiction of the postmodern condition, wherein
there are no unquestionable grounds or truths. The desperate need to live in absolute certainty
and assurance makes characters deny the postmodern condition, and engage in a process of
forced forgetfulness to forget about their apprehension of the postmodern condition and
different events which brought them to it. The characters in both plays use different
metanarratives to create meaning and live their lives with the illusion of complete certainty.
The process of forced forgetfulness will be deduced through theories of memory and forgetting
as understood and explained by Jonathan K. Foster. The thesis demonstrates how, due to them
charting their entire lives on the basis of different metanarratives, characters end up living in
an alienated and inauthentic manner. The apathetic and emasculated state of their identities
make them indulge in extreme acts of violence and rage. Albee shows how identities of his
characters get compromised in different ways by suffering their social death.
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The Magus Unveiled:Exploring Postmodernist Existential Uncertainty in John Fowles' novelArman, Nadia January 2024 (has links)
The purpose of this essay is to analyze the novel “The Magus” written by John Fowles through the theoretical lens of postmodernism, and the aim is to highlight the existentialism behind the story. The study seeks to explain the intricate relationship described in the novel between societal norms and manipulation, and existential themes such as the fragmentation of reality, the autonomy to choose, and the search for meaning in life. The analysis focuses on four characters, in particular their role in the narrative, as well as the use of intertextuality and specific narratological solutions like the first-person narrator and non-linear storytelling. Through the understanding of the sub-stories in the novel, this paper aims to offer a better understanding of Fowles’ ability to interconnect postmodernism with existential themes to create a rich and complex story, and ultimately to underscore the human condition within our society.
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A Novel Approach Towards the Analysis of Emergent Narration in Game Design : Utilizing the Design, Dynamics, Experience frameworkAndersson, Joel, Ding, Lizhou January 2024 (has links)
In the field of Game Design, multiple frameworks have emerged to give an ontological understanding of iterative Game Design and game creation. However, following critique of the MDA framework in regards to how it treats narratives, our group in this paper utilized the alternative DDE framework, as a tool to investigate any of deeper detail in player-game interactions within the game Cities: Skylines II as compared to the MDA framework. The study was done as an inductive narrative analysis of recorded gameplay found on video-hosting websites, such as YouTube where we would discuss the ways the two frameworks operate in terms of narratives.
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O processo ilustrador do livro infantil à luz do diálogo palavra e imagem em obras de Eva Furnari: concepções e práticas possíveisArantes, Rita de Cássia Batista 15 December 2009 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2009-12-15 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / The main object of this research is reading the child s book illustrator process
considering the dialog between word and image in the writer and illustrator Eva
Furnari s books, under poetic and expressive functions. Many categorical and
functionalist studies on image and word are, here, thought over and applied: Roland
Barthes (1972); Roman Jakobson (1985); Kibédi-Varga (1989); Luís Camargo
(1998), Rui de Oliveira (1998), among other proposals of studious and artists
involved in child s book illustration.
We are trying to demonstrate the fable reinvention of the child s book, taking
from the illustrated pages since oral narrative versions to Eva Furnari s imagetic
narrative and pieces of other contemporary illustrator authors, intending to find a
methodology to read the space, understood as the place of language creation. The
outcome of the interaction between the artistic graphic project and the literary project
is the illustrator text, space of reading experience and using the image interrelated to
the word. This analytic and interpretative study came out of questions concerning to
the relation between autonomy and the complementarity of image and word
observed in the illustrative polissemic Furnari s works and others. During the
preparation of this study, questions on the reading expression under the author s and
the reader s imaginary, favoring the understanding of reading ages, beyond the
verbal and visual reading hierarchy to be observed in young reader s formation.
Chapter I deals with the illustration historicity, emphasizing the relationship
word-image statute, in autonomy and interdependence, offering conjectures to the
visual approach for child s books pages. The chapter II focuses on the thematic
importance of the written project facing the interactive experience between the
imaginary project and the verbal one considered as a text, space of language
production. The third one presents a dialog on the bidimensional physical space of
Furnari s books pages and other illustrators in order to apply the methodology and
the final results related to the illustrative text semantics / O objetivo central desta dissertação é a leitura do processo ilustrador do livro
infantil à luz das relações palavra e imagem nas obras da escritora-ilustradora Eva
Furnari, a serem investigadas sob a perspectiva das funções poética e expressiva.
Diversas teorias categoriais e funcionalistas do estudo da imagem e da palavra são,
aqui, repensadas e aplicadas, como as de Roland Barthes (1972), Romam Jakobson
(1985), Luís Camargo (1998), Rui de Oliveira (1998), dentre outras propostas de
estudiosos e artistas da ilustração do livro infantil.
Trata-se de demonstrar o trabalho de reinvenção fabular do livro infantil,
tomando, nas páginas ilustradas, as versões da narrativa oral em narrativa imagética
de Furnari e de outros autores ilustradores contemporâneos, com a intenção de
encontrar uma metodologia de leitura do espaço, entendido como lugar de criação
de linguagem. A resultante da interação do projeto gráfico artístico com o projeto
literário é o texto ilustrador, espaço da experiência de leitura e uso da imagem em
inter-relação com a palavra. Este estudo analítico interpretativo surgiu de
indagações manifestas nas relações entre a autonomia e a complementaridade da
imagem e da palavra observadas no trabalho ilustrador polissêmico de Furnari e
demais autores. No decorrer deste estudo, questões foram levantadas quanto à
expressão da leitura sob o imaginário tanto do produtor, quanto do leitor,
privilegiando o entendimento das idades da leitura, em função de uma hierarquia da
leitura não só verbal, mas também visual, a ser observada na formação do leitor
criança.
O capítulo I refere-se à historicidade da ilustração, enfatizando o estatuto das
relações palavra-imagem, em autonomia e interdependência, oferecendo
pressupostos para a abordagem da visualidade na página do livro infantil. O capítulo
II centraliza a importância temática do projeto escrito, considerando-se a experiência
interativa entre o projeto imagético e o verbal, como texto, lugar de produção de
linguagem. O capítulo III faz o diálogo com esse espaço físico bidimensional da
página dos livros de Furnari e de vários outros ilustradores em função da aplicação
de sua metodologia e resultados finais relativos à semântica do texto ilustrador
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"Nam-Shub versus the Big Other: Revising the Language that Binds Us in Philip K. Dick, Neal Stephenson, Samuel R. Delany, and Chuck Palahniuk"Embry, Jason Michael 21 April 2009 (has links)
Within the science fiction genre, utopian as well as dystopian experiments have found equal representation. This balanced treatment of two diametrically opposed social constructs results from a focus on the future for which this particular genre is well known. Philip K. Dick’s VALIS, Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash, Samuel R. Delany’s Babel-17, and Chuck Palahniuk’s Lullaby, more aptly characterized as speculative fiction because of its use of magic against scientific social subjugation, each tackle dystopian qualities of contemporary society by analyzing the power that language possesses in the formation of the self and propagation of ideology. The utopian goals of these texts advocate for a return to the modernist metanarrative and a revision of postmodern cynicism because the authors look to the future for hopeful solutions to the social and ideological problems of today. Using Slavoj Žižek’s readings of Jacques Lacan and Theodor Adorno’s readings of Karl Marx for critical insight, I argue these four novels imagine language as the key to personal empowerment and social change. While not all of the novels achieve their utopian goals, they each evince a belief that the attempt belies a return to the modernist metanarrative and a rejection of postmodern helplessness. Thus, each novel imagines the revision of Žižek’s big Other through the remainders of Adorno’s inevitably failed revolutions, injecting hope in a literary period that had long since lost it.
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Postmoderniara : En revy över en postmodern idévärld i Harry Martinsons AniaraAlmroth, Klas January 2014 (has links)
Uppsatsen ämnar belysa hur Harry Martinsons Aniara (1956) förebådar postmodernismen trots att verket är rotat i den modernistiska traditionen. Analysen tar upp två aspekter med fokus på innehåll och berättarteknik där verket visar prov på en postmodern idévärld. Först behandlas miman, och resonemang förs kring att hon och hennes produktion bör ses som en masskulturell företeelse snarare än som elitistisk diktkonst. Analysen anknyter till Baudrillards teori om hyperverklighet och simulacrum och visar på hur miman skapar detta med sin kulturproduktion. Här framstår två tolkningsalternativ: ett där miman i egenskap av masskultur uppvärderar synen på masskulturen och pekar framåt mot postmodernismen, och ett andra där hon blir en negativ symbol för masskulturen. Detta eftersom hon döljer verkligheten för befolkningen så pass länge att de slutar försöka lösa sin situation. Den andra aspekten är Aniaras förhållande till metanarrativ, vilket belyses utifrån Lyotards teorier om vad som kännetecknar det postmoderna samhället. Analysen visar hur metanarrativen ses som omöjliga inom fiktionen och istället byts ut mot lokalt meningsskapande. Verket i sin helhet bjuder också på motstånd mot metanarrativ genom att (1) utge sig för att vara en klart avgränsad händelse, (2) skriva ut ett motstånd mot djuplodande tolkningar och slutligen genom att (3) mimaroben som ska förmedla revyn över människan i tid och rum inte är pålitlig nog att lägga fram en allmän sanning. Sammantaget konstateras att verket är rotat i modernismen men att det samtidigt förebådar postmodernismen i dess syn på masskultur, hyperverklighet och metanarrativ. / The aim of this essay is to highlight tendencies of postmodernism in Harry Martinson’s Aniara (1956), a work that has traditionally been placed in a modernist context. The analysis centers around two aspects in the text with the aim of finding traces of a postmodern world view. First the “mima”, an enigmatic machine that consoles the passengers in the first six years of the journey, is reasoned to be a mass cultural phenomenon rather than an elitist poetic device, as previous studies have suggested. The cultural production of the machine is then analyzed in the light of the theories of hyper reality and simulacrum, as conceived by Jean Baudrillard. The analysis renders two possible implications, one where the machine can be viewed as a precursor to a postmodern positive attitude of mass culture, and one more modernistic where the machine in its role as mass culture numbs the passengers and prevents them from acting on their situation in time. The second part of the analysis focuses on the view of metanarratives, as expressed within the fiction and in the wok as a whole. Jean-François Lyotard and his explanation of postmodernism’s incredulity towards metanarratives is used as a theoretical standpoint. The analysis shows that metanarratives are considered impossible within the fiction of Aniara as during the course of the journey, they are replaced with more local methods of creating meaning. On the whole, the book could be seen to replace the metanarrative of human progress by one telling of the inadequacy and inert destructibility of humanity. However, the analysis shows that metanarratives are rejected all together. The construction of a new metanarrative is made impossible by (1) the fictitious accounts clearly being a local event, (2) the text openly stating the impossibility of deeper interpretation and finally (3) the work employing a narrator too unreliable to be able to convey the unarguable truths necessary to create a new metanarrative.
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Hope in America: Lyotard and Rorty, Dobson and Obama, and the Struggle to Maintain Hope in Postmodern TimesKeen, Daniel E. Rossi 25 September 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Skrifgebruik in die pastoraatCilliers, Octavius Jacobus 30 September 2004 (has links)
This research pursues the use of the Bible in counseling. The focus is to identify the different theological paradigms in which the Bible is used and the different ways that counsellors make use of the Bible in therapy. It also pursues the experiences that the clients had of such counsellors in the use of the Bible. Therapists and clients from different theological backgrounds partake in this study. An overview is given of the shift that is taking place from a modern to a postmodern approach about reality, truth, and knowledge and the effect there of on the use of the Bible in therapy. The aim of the research is to explore if an evangelical christian in a postmodern context can make use of the Bible as the inspired word of God. The implication of this can be profound for pastoral therapy. A narrative paradigm is adopted to dicuss the discourses that evolved from the research. / Practical Theology / M.Th. (Pastoral Therapy)
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Skrifgebruik in die pastoraatCilliers, Octavius Jacobus 30 September 2004 (has links)
This research pursues the use of the Bible in counseling. The focus is to identify the different theological paradigms in which the Bible is used and the different ways that counsellors make use of the Bible in therapy. It also pursues the experiences that the clients had of such counsellors in the use of the Bible. Therapists and clients from different theological backgrounds partake in this study. An overview is given of the shift that is taking place from a modern to a postmodern approach about reality, truth, and knowledge and the effect there of on the use of the Bible in therapy. The aim of the research is to explore if an evangelical christian in a postmodern context can make use of the Bible as the inspired word of God. The implication of this can be profound for pastoral therapy. A narrative paradigm is adopted to dicuss the discourses that evolved from the research. / Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology / M.Th. (Pastoral Therapy)
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Divine authority and covenant community in contemporary cultureBillingham, John January 2014 (has links)
The question I address is: how might a theology of authority be conceived in the light of questions raised by what is termed 'post-modernity'? Is it possible to articulate a theology of authority coming to the church community 'from God' that avoids an oppressive and alienating heteronomy? The thesis explores the question of authority as of vital importance in the sociological dimension of religion, calling for legitimisation (in light of claims made for itself) and as obligatory in the theological sphere. For this reason the project involves two methodologies (theological and sociological/ethnographic). While this investigation is relevant to all sections of the Christian church, particular attention is paid to Baptist churches in the UK, since they hold a concept in their tradition that I suggest is valuable in answering the question of the thesis, namely that of covenant. Within the Christian tradition there is an inner 'problematic' relating the personal authority of Christ to the forms of institution (church) and text (scripture). I explore this with a brief survey of theological authority as found in the fourfold foundation of scripture, tradition, reason and experience. From this is developed a brief theological and Christological reflection on divine authority and covenant theology as found in Karl Barth and his response to the 'inner problematic'. Within contemporary culture I view authority through the lens of so-called 'postmodernism', identifying four challenges to the notion of 'external authority' (all of which exemplify a move from the external to internal, and objective to subjective approaches to authority). This is further explored by means of qualitative research with one-to-one interviews conducted in a Baptist church in York. This data is reflected upon by means of ethnography and 'judicious narratives', especially in dialogue with material from Guest ('congregational study'), Heelas and Woodhead ('subjectivised-self') and Healy ('theodramatic horizon' and 'practical-prophetic ecclesiology'), providing an intersection between the language of theology and sociology. The concept of church as covenant community is explored in Baptist and (more briefly) Anglican traditions, leading to a constructive proposal that both the inner-church 'problematic' and the 'postmodern' challenge to authority might begin to be resolved with the notion of covenant. It is within this context of relationship, human and divine, that the authoritative and revelatory Word of God, the story that is Christ, is found in community and praxis. Here is a 'triangulating' relationship between authority, story and covenant revealing divine authority in a non-coercive way and relevant to contemporary culture.
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