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Über ein englisches auferstehungsspiel ein beitrag zur geschichte des dramas und der Lollarden ...Scharpff, Paulus, January 1900 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Erlangen. / Lebenslauf. "Die folgende abhandlung ist der hauptteil der einleitung zu einer kritischen ausgabe der bruchstücke des auferstchungsspiels, die die Malone society reprints 1912 unter dem titel "The Ressurrection of our Lord" zum abdruck brachten."
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Über ein englisches auferstehungsspiel; ein beitrag zur geschichte des dramas und der Lollarden ...Scharpff, Paulus, January 1900 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Erlangen. / Lebenslauf. "Die folgende abhandlung ist der hauptteil der einleitung zu einer kritischen ausgabe der bruchstücke des auferstchungsspiels, die die Malone society reprints 1912 unter dem titel "The Ressurrection of our Lord" zum abdruck brachten."
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Regarder, ecouter et repentir : le sacrement de penitence dans trois moralites francaises /Davaut, Nathalie, January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 1998. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 245-254). Also available on the Internet.
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Regarder, ecouter et repentir le sacrement de penitence dans trois moralites francaises /Davaut, Nathalie, January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 1998. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 245-254). Also available on the Internet.
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City life, premarital sexuality and the politics of chastity : an ethnographic approach to sexual moralities and social reproduction in the context of IstanbulScalco, Patricia Daniel January 2015 (has links)
This thesis consists of an anthropological investigation of discourses and practices associated with premarital sexuality in the context of contemporary urban Turkey. Grounded in thirteen months of ethnographic fieldwork in Istanbul, this thesis draws on the experiences of local women – and to some extent, local men – threading on their concerns and experiences about virginity and premarital sex while exploring the relationship between sexual moralities and the city, controversies on the theme of abortion, the relationship between contraceptive choices and sexual moralities, the normativity of marriage and the respective construction of the marriageable subject, and the centrality of perceptions about the hymen in articulating processes of social reproduction. Through an exploration of these realms of experience, the thesis argues that an ethnographic approach to sexual moralities in the context of Turkey benefits from an historical approach to the events of the foundation of the republic. I suggest that the rhetoric of territorial loss, territorial partition and defence of actual and symbolic frontiers is a crucial part of processes of socialisation of new generations into contemporary identities, and is relived in people’s perceptions of the rupture of the hymen. Thus, the hymenocentric approach to virginity in Turkey conflates history and a politics of belonging in terms of a mereographic nexus of part/ whole, manifested in dilemmas of belonging as ‘part of’ (family, neighbourhood, city, and nation) or as ‘apart from’ (family, neighbourhood, city, and nation). This, I suggest, allows younger generations into an embodied mimetic experience of the initial dramas posed at the foundation of the republic.
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The dramatic treatment of false appearances in the major Tudor morality playsWierum, Ann Robinson January 1966 (has links)
The plan of this thesis is to examine the dramatic treatment of evil as deception or false appearance in a representative selection of fourteenth- and fifteenth-century morality plays. The structural core of these plays Is based on the Psychomachia, or conflict between good and evil in man’s soul, which forms the dominant theme of Medieval allegory. In the morality plays, this conflict Is most characteristically presented as a plot of deception In which Vice masquerading as Virtue tempts Mankind by sophistical argument into believing that evil is good. Theologically, this theatrical metaphor of disguise is rooted in the Medieval concept of Satan as the arch-deceiver and father of lies who can take many Protean shapes in his efforts to ensnare man's soul. Psychologically, the metaphor also embodies a simple but profound description of man's efforts to “rationalize” his own wrong-doings and to dress them in a more palatable name and guise. In this contest0 the plays may also be interpreted as allegories of self-delusion within the soul of man.
This archetypal disguise of evil offers a supreme opportunity for a drama of Intrigue and deception based on the elemental human problem of recognizing evil in its true nature. The central dramatic problem of the morality plays is therefore twofold: to make the plot lively enough to hold the interest of the audience, and at the same time to make the nature of the deception clear to them even while the victim on stage remains deluded. Such clarification is vital to the homiletic intent of the plays, for the (spectators must net be deceived along with the hero but must be constantly reminded of the moral lesson.
The dramatic methods arising from this problem may be summarized in three general categories to be examined in the course of this study. First, recognition is indirectly enforced by conventional devices reflecting the traditionally deceptive nature of evil: its theatrical mode of disguise and its "diabolically" clever mode of argument. These conventions, which will be discussed in the first two chapters, would be familiar to the Tudor and the Elizabethan audience through the widespread appearance of this theme in non-dramatic as well as dramatic literature of the time. Seconds the original theological allegory becomes overlaid with apparently secular warnings against social and political fraud and pretense. This surface move toward secularization may also reinforce the theological recognition of evil by placing it in a familiar everyday setting! and the morality plays share in a general Tudor preoccupation with fraud and hypocrisy which is rooted in Medieval conceptions of the nature of evil. Third, the authors continually exploit the ironic contrast between appearance and reality within the plays, allowing the informed audience to triumph over the deluded victim without forgetting the moral behind the deception. This two-dimensional relationship between actors and audience imparts a distinctive atmosphere to the morality plays, based on the use of dramatic irony for moral ends.
It will be suggested that these dramatic methods may largely account for the continued vitality and popularity of the morality plays over a period of more than 150 years merging into the age of the major Elizabethan playwrights and providing them with important native examples of a drama based on intrigue. In the moralities, these methods give rise to a lively and flexible form of theatrical presentation, exploiting a dynamic relationship between the audience and the characters on stage, and possessing both artistic and psychological validity in reflecting the original allegory of evil disguised as good. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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An analysis of the dramatic function of the vice figure in the morality play /Maidment, John, 1950- January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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An analysis of the dramatic function of the vice figure in the morality play /Maidment, John, 1950- January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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The life and death of EverymanBrown, Katharine A. January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (M. A.)--Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, South Hamilton, Mass., 1998. / Abstract and vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 119-122).
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Studien zur Dramenform vor Shakespeare Moralität, Interlude, romaneskes Drama.Habicht, Werner, January 1968 (has links)
Habilitationsschrift--Munich. / Summary in English. Bibliography: p. 247-249.
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