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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.
231

Erotismo e crueldade em Coxas - sex fiction & delírios de Roberto Piva / Eroticism and cruelty in Coxas - sex fiction & delírios by Roberto Piva

Pereira, Fellipe Ramos, 1988- 27 August 2018 (has links)
Orientador: Marcos Aparecido Lopes / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Estudos da Linguagem / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-27T21:59:09Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Pereira_FellipeRamos_M.pdf: 992086 bytes, checksum: 35d2346ea14779e6bf9fb3879bf1860b (MD5) Previous issue date: 2015 / Resumo: O presente trabalho tem por objetivo desenvolver um estudo sobre a obra Coxas ¿ sex fiction & delírios de Roberto Piva. Buscar-se-á analisar os pontos de contato entre a crueldade e o erotismo no interior desta obra. Cabe assinalar que Coxas é uma obra erótica, que tem por tema o erotismo, e não uma obra com passagens eróticas. Por isso o que se busca fundamentalmente neste trabalho é analisar como erotismo e a crueldade são trabalhados pelo poeta. Para isso se desenvolveu dois pontos principais na pesquisa. O primeiro é exatamente o que diz respeito ao erotismo, porque a crueldade que se busca analisar provém deste aspecto e ele se mostra bastante relevante na obra em questão. O segundo é uma análise formal, pois há nitidamente em Coxas certa hibridização dos gêneros poesia e prosa. Para cumprir estas tarefas buscou-se primeiramente compreender como se compunha o quadro poético da época em que Roberto Piva inicia sua trajetória nas letras e como se configura o erotismo em sua obra. Em seguida se procurou alguns parâmetros especulativos que servissem de apoio à análises da obra nos aspectos apontados, por fim o problema formal se mostrou também de grande relevância, por isso há um capítulo destinado a expor os traços formais de Coxas / Abstract: This dissertation aims to develop a study about the book "Coxas" ¿ sex fiction & delirious, by Roberto Piva. We intend to analyze the points of contact between cruelty and eroticism within this work. It is worth highlighting that "Coxas" is an erotic literary work, whose theme is eroticism, and not an erotic passages book. That is why we seek primarily to investigate how eroticism and cruelty were used by the poet. In this regard we had developed two main points in the research. The first is exactly what concerns the eroticism, because the idea of cruelty that we seek to analyze comes from this aspect and it shows high relevance in the mentioned work. The second one is a formal analysis because it is possible to notice that there is poetry and prose genre hybridization into "Coxas". In order to accomplish this goal we sought to understand firstly on how the poetic scenario was composed from the time that Roberto Piva had begun his career in the poetic world and how eroticism had been configured in his work. And then, we tried some speculative parameters that work in order to give us support in the work analysis on what concerns the highlighted aspects. Finally, the formal point had also been showed highly relevant, so there is a chapter that intends to expose the formal features in "Coxas" / Mestrado / Teoria e Critica Literaria / Mestre em Teoria e História Literária
232

Lucwaningo Lolujulile Lwetinganekwane TeSiswati

Mgwenya, Hildah Nurse January 2020 (has links)
PhD (IsiSwati) / MER Mathivha Centre for African Languages, Arts and Culture / Lolu lucwaningo lolujulile lwetinganekwane teSiswati letihleleke ngendlela lelandzelako: tinganeko, ematekelo, tinsumo naletinye. Sakhiwo nalokucuketfwe tinganekwane kubukwe ngekuchumana nebalingisi, umnyakato netetsameli. Tinhlobo tetinganekwane tikhonjiswe, tichazwe, ticondzaniswe, tahlelwa tabuye tahumusheka. Tinganekwane tinemibono, imicabango, tehlakalo, imigomo, tinhlelomcondvo netinkholelo letikhulisa sisekelolwati nekwateka kwemasiko. Tinganekwane tetfulwe ngelulwimi lwebuphrozi tabuye tatibandzakanya ekusebentiseni imigomo yetemibhalo yesimanje lefana nesakhiwo, sakhiwana sibekandzaba, balingisi netingcikitsi. Kuchazwa kwemoya, sikhatsi, imifanekisomcondvo, kuphukuta nesiphetfo kukhombisa tinchazelo nemilayeto. Tinhlelolwati yetemibhalo, yemisebenti neyeluhlolo tikhetselwe tindlela nekusetjentiswa kulolucwaningo. / NRF
233

Vanishing Act

Pryor, Caitlin 05 1900 (has links)
This dissertation is comprised of a collection of poems preceded by a critical preface. The preface reconsiders the value of discontinuous poetic forms and advocates a return to lyric as an antidote to the toxic aspects of what Tony Hoagland terms “the skittery poem of our moment.” I consider poems by Wendy Xu, Kevin Prufer, Sharon Olds, and Stephen Dunn in depth to facilitate a discussion about the value of a more centrist position between the poles of supreme discontinuity and totalizing continuity. Though poets working in discontinuous forms are rightly skeptical of the hierarchies that govern narrative and linear forms, as Czesław Miłosz notes in The Witness of Poetry, “a poet discovers a secret, namely that he can be faithful to real things only by arranging them hierarchically.” In my own poems, I make use of the hierarchies of ordered perception in lyric and narrative forms to faithfully illuminate the collapsed structures of my own family history in the shadow of Detroit. I practice the principles I advocate in the preface, using a continuous form to address fractured realities in a busy, disordered age when poets often seek forms as fragmented as their perceptions. These poems are distinctly American, but because there is no true royalty in America, our great cultural and economic institutions—television, music, film, magazines, and big business—take the place of the castle (the book’s emblem) while Michael Jackson ultimately rises as the commanding dead king whose passing prompts contemplation of the viability of popular culture, family, history, and geography. The fallen structures that litter the work are many: the twin towers, chess rooks, bounce castles, nuclear families, the auto industry. However, the sole structure cohering the whole is that of a lyric voice whose authority is derived through lived experience and presented in rich, continuous poetic forms.
234

Post-independence Shona poetry, the quest and struggle for total liberation

Tembo, Charles 01 1900 (has links)
This study pursues the quest and struggle for total liberation in post-independence Shona poetry. The study also relies on views of key respondents obtained through interviews and questionnaires. Couched and guided by Afrocentricity and Africana womanism, the study elucidates the politico-economic and socio-cultural factors that militate against Africa’s total liberation in general as well as women’s liberation, respectively. Simultaneously, critical judgments are passed on the extent to which poets immerse their art in African existential philosophy. The study is energized by the idea that pursuing the quest for authentic liberation provides a lens through which one can understand threats to Africa’s true liberation. It observes that poets and key informants largely attribute ersartz independence to internal problems. The researcher holds that it is problematic to hold a domesticated vision of the African condition to the extent that poets and other literary workers need to widen their canvas beyond fighting internal oppression and internationalise the struggle. The researcher argues that it is myopic and self-defeating to protest against Africa itself without giving adequate attention to the incapacitating hegemonic world system. Therefore, the poetry is lacking on its critique on domination. The centerpiece of the thesis is that in order to be purposeful and functional, poets need to grapple with both endogenous and exogenous factors that obstruct the march towards genuine liberation. The study also observes that in some instances poets produce cheap literature which is marked by a narrow and moralistic approach and this is attributable to the fact that poets lack a scientific vision in understanding reality. Concerning women’s authentic liberation, the commonly identified obstacles to women’s freedom are the male counterpart, self-depreciation, lack of education and culture. The study observes that women poets in Ngatisimuke (1994) and key respondents seem to approach gender relations from a feminist perspective and hence fail to situate women’s condition in the context of the history and culture that shape African gender relations. Women poets in Ngatisimuke fall short of internationalising their struggle in concert with the male counterpart such that their poetry degenerates into sponsored and misguided activism. / African Languages / D. Litt. et Phil. (African Languages)
235

Ut pictura poesis: kleur en teks in die latynse poesie van die Eerste Eeu vC met spesiale verwysing na Die Georgica van Vergilius

Meyer, Roléne January 2019 (has links)
Abstracts in Afrikaans and English / Aangesien die konsep van kleur vaag en abstrak is, verskil die ervaring én beskrywing daarvan van individu tot individu en van kultuur tot kultuur. Aldus word die waarneem van kleur dikwels ʼn persoonlike en subjektiewe ervaring. In die geval van historiese tale, egter, is die uitdaging om kleurbeskrywing korrek oor te dra, nie sielkundig of esteties van aard nie, maar kultureel, aangesien daar onderliggend aan hierdie tale ʼn unieke linguistiese sisteem gekoppel is. So byvoorbeeld moet die ontleding van Latynse kleurwoorde en die toewysing van relevante betekenismoontlikhede op ʼn besondere wyse aan die Afrikaanse idioom geanker word, sonder om die uniekheid van elk van hierdie tale in te boet. Dit is gevolglik die taak van die navorser om moderne wetenskaplike beskouings oor kleuraanwending met sensitiwiteit en oordeelkundig op die antieke kleursisteme toe te pas. Die bestudering van kleur en kleurgebruik in die Oudheid was vir ʼn lang tyd in omstredenheid gehul. Navorsing in hierdie verband het aanvanklik slegs op die tegniese en argeologiese aspekte van kleurproduksie en -gebruik in die Griekse en Romeinse kuns en argitektuur gefokus. Daarenteen is teoretiese kwessies oor die funksie van kleur in die non-tegniese, estetiese letterkunde selde aangespreek, veral weens die invloed van linguisties-semantiese en kleur-psiogologiese vraagstukke. In hierdie proefskrif val die kollig op Vergilius se keuse en aanwending van dié kleurterme wat beide eksplisiet en implisiet in die Georgica voorkom. Aangesien ʼn sinvolle analise van hierdie digter se kleurgebruik nie tot die Georgica beperk kan word nie, moet die ooreenstemmende terme nie net in sy Eclogae en Aeneïs nie, maar ook in die werke van sy voorgangers, die digters Lucretius en Catullus, betrek word. Uit ʼn beperkte omvang selekteer en gebruik Vergilius kleurwoorde met ʼn delikate presisie van betekenis. Hoewel die stelselmatige ontleding van hierdie terme se betekenismoontlikhede kontekstueel beperk is, toon hierdie benadering in watter mate Vergilius innoverend en verbeeldingryk voorkom. Hierdie inligting dien vervolgens as parateks vir die studie wat volg: Vergilius se gebruik van kleurterme deur die verloop van die vier boeke van die Georgica met die fokus op die letterkundige impak en literêre effekte wat deurgaans as ‘eg Vergiliaans’ beoordeel kan word. . Sou hierdie kleurterme geïgnoreer of net nie raakgelees word nie, kan die leser nie daarop aanspraak maak dat die Georgica waarlik verstaan word nie. Dit is dus die doel van hierdie navorsing om die leser toe te rus met middele tot die vind van ʼn dieper insig in en groter waardering vir hierdie werk as uitnemende poësie. / Since the concept of colour is vague and abstract, the perception of colour differs from individual to individual and from culture to culture to become a highly personal and subjective experience. In the case of historical languages, however, the description of colour is challenging. Conveying colour description correctly is not a psychological or aesthetic exercise, but cultural, as each language has a unique underlying linguistic sensitivity. Consequently, in this dissertation which is written in Afrikaans, the analysis of Latin colour words must be anchored to the Afrikaans idiom in such a unique way as not to detract from the differences in cultural feel between these two languages. Therefore, and in spite of obvious differences, it is the task of the researcher to apply modern scientific views discerningly and sensitively to any ancient colour system. The study of colour and its application in antiquity has long been controversial. Initially research on these aspects of Greek and Roman societies focused only on the technical and archaeological aspects of colour production and its application in their art and architecture. In the wide array of theories regarding linguistic-semantic issues, colour-psychology and also colour aesthetics, theoretical issues regarding the function of colour in non-technical (‘literary’) works were rarely addressed, This dissertation focuses on those colour terms which Vergil uses both explicitly and implicitly in the Georgica. A meaningful analysis of this poet's use of colour must of necessity also include the application of the corresponding terms in his Eclogae and Aeneid, as well as those in the works of his poetic predecessors, Lucretius and Catullus. Selected from a limited range, Vergil applies colour words with a delicate precision of meaning. Although the systematic analysis of these words indicates a range of meaning which can be contextually limited, this approach highlights Vergil’s innovative and imaginative use of colour. With these findings as basis the focus shifts to the consecutive use of colour terms throughout the four books to indicate extraordinary and innovative literary effects which can only be described as ‘thoroughly Vergilian’. If these colour strategies were to escape the reader’s attention, it would result in a poorer understanding of the poem. It is therefore the purpose of this research to equip readers with strategies that will lead to a greater appreciation of the Georgics as exceptional poetry. / Classics and World Languages / D. Litt. et Phil. (Klassieke Studies)
236

The poet as critic : a study of the related critical writings of Paul Valéry, T.S. Eliot and Jorge Guillén

Sibbald, Kay. January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
237

South African Great War poetry 1914-1918 : a literary-historiographical analysis

Genis, Gerhard 21 August 2014 (has links)
Within a southern African literary-historiographical milieu, the corpse of the First World War (1914-1918) either wanders in the ‘darkling’ woods or wades in the ice-mirrored sea of a sinister psychological landscape. The veld, with its moon, flowers, bowers, animals and sea, is a potent South African metaphysical conceit in which both the white and black corpse – the horrific waste product of war – is seemingly safely hidden within euphemistic shadows. However, these shades are metonymic and metaphorical offshoots of an Adamastorian nightmare, which has its inception in a nascent South African literary tradition. This thesis explores these literary-historiographical leftovers within the war poetry of both civilians and soldiers. Both ‘white’ and ‘black’ poetry is discussed in a similar context of dressing the corpse in meaning: a meaning that resides deep within the wound of loss. In tracing this blood spoor in the poetry a highly eclectic approach has been followed. As the title illustrates, both literary and historical approaches were used in analysing the effect of the Great War on the poetry, and by implication, on the society from which it sprung. It is, therefore, a cultural history as well as an intellectual subtext of wartorn South Africa that has been scrutinised, and is revealed in its poetic literature. Archival research and the scouring of individual volumes were the sources of the poems for this study. This is true especially with regards to the ‘white’ poetry, where very few examples of poetry have been published in secondary histories. Various anthologies and studies on ‘black’ poetry considerably lightened the search for war izibongo. A variety of literary theoretical approaches have been most useful in extracting the subtext of early 20th century South African history. The psychoanalysis of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung’s collective unconscious have been most insightful. The poststructuralist theory of Julia Kristeva has cast more light on the recalcitrant corpse, the main waste product of war. David Lewis-Williams’s recent archaeological-anthropological approach has also been crucial in understanding the indigenous izibongo by putting forward Neuroscience as an explanation of the universally held neuropsychological hallucinatory poetic experience. Finally, war poetry in this thesis is seen as verse written by both soldiers and civilians as a response to the reality – or rather surreal unreality – of conflict, in an effort to come to terms with the abjection of both body and mind. Thea Harrington‘s manqué reading of Kristeva’s poststructuralist corpse is used as a referent for the abject, or loss thereof, that is to be found in the war poetry. Throughout the thesis, the term manqué is used to refer to the corpse as a fluid linguistic-psychological signifier saturated with loss. It is the manqué that has essentially remained hidden behind the various political histories of the war. / English Studies
238

A comparative study of satire and humour as communicative strategies in the poems of four Tsonga poets

Risenga, David Jinja 11 1900 (has links)
This study involves an investigation into the use of satire and humour as strategies of communication. The poetry of four Tsonga poets selected for study includes these strategies which are investigated for the purpose of determining the extent to which they function as strategies of communication. The study consists of four chapters which can be summarized as follows: CHAPTER 1 contains the introduction, aim, scope and method of approach of the entire study. Theories and definitions of satire and humour are also presented here. In CHAPTER 2 the poems selected for study are analysed in terms of invective, subtle and light-hearted satire. CHAPTER 3 focuses attention on the style of presentation of comic and derisive humour. CHAPTER 4 highlights and elucidates the most significant findings of the study. The most competent poet of the four at using satire and humour is identified and his excellence declared and justified / African Languages / M.A. (African languages)
239

South African Great War poetry 1914-1918 : a literary-historiographical analysis

Genis, Gerhard 21 August 2014 (has links)
Within a southern African literary-historiographical milieu, the corpse of the First World War (1914-1918) either wanders in the ‘darkling’ woods or wades in the ice-mirrored sea of a sinister psychological landscape. The veld, with its moon, flowers, bowers, animals and sea, is a potent South African metaphysical conceit in which both the white and black corpse – the horrific waste product of war – is seemingly safely hidden within euphemistic shadows. However, these shades are metonymic and metaphorical offshoots of an Adamastorian nightmare, which has its inception in a nascent South African literary tradition. This thesis explores these literary-historiographical leftovers within the war poetry of both civilians and soldiers. Both ‘white’ and ‘black’ poetry is discussed in a similar context of dressing the corpse in meaning: a meaning that resides deep within the wound of loss. In tracing this blood spoor in the poetry a highly eclectic approach has been followed. As the title illustrates, both literary and historical approaches were used in analysing the effect of the Great War on the poetry, and by implication, on the society from which it sprung. It is, therefore, a cultural history as well as an intellectual subtext of wartorn South Africa that has been scrutinised, and is revealed in its poetic literature. Archival research and the scouring of individual volumes were the sources of the poems for this study. This is true especially with regards to the ‘white’ poetry, where very few examples of poetry have been published in secondary histories. Various anthologies and studies on ‘black’ poetry considerably lightened the search for war izibongo. A variety of literary theoretical approaches have been most useful in extracting the subtext of early 20th century South African history. The psychoanalysis of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung’s collective unconscious have been most insightful. The poststructuralist theory of Julia Kristeva has cast more light on the recalcitrant corpse, the main waste product of war. David Lewis-Williams’s recent archaeological-anthropological approach has also been crucial in understanding the indigenous izibongo by putting forward Neuroscience as an explanation of the universally held neuropsychological hallucinatory poetic experience. Finally, war poetry in this thesis is seen as verse written by both soldiers and civilians as a response to the reality – or rather surreal unreality – of conflict, in an effort to come to terms with the abjection of both body and mind. Thea Harrington‘s manqué reading of Kristeva’s poststructuralist corpse is used as a referent for the abject, or loss thereof, that is to be found in the war poetry. Throughout the thesis, the term manqué is used to refer to the corpse as a fluid linguistic-psychological signifier saturated with loss. It is the manqué that has essentially remained hidden behind the various political histories of the war. / English Studies
240

論王逸《楚辭章句》的形成. / Study of the formation of Wang Yi's Chuci Zhangju / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collection / Lun Wang Yi "Chu ci zhang ju" de xing cheng.

January 2010 (has links)
Chuci Zhangju was compiled by Wang Yi (ca.90--ca.158) in the Eastern Han Dynasty(25--220) as an agglomeration of Chuci studies since Qin and Han Dynasties. Chuci Zhangju gathered QuYuan (ca.343--ca.277BC) and other authors' work since the Warring States period and its annotation style---Zhangjuti has been receiving high praise. / On the modern Chuci research, Chuci Zhangju is generally viewed as a mere ancillary annotation, while compared to canonical Chuci. As a result, there is no specialized work focus on Chuci Zhangju. Only scattered academic works are found, and their core concerns are doctrine of canonical texts and literary commentaries, while explanations of words and textual criticism were included sometimes. As a lack of comprehensive analysis of Chuci Zhanju is observed, my following research is carried out in four parts, including textual, annotation, the order of arrangement and interpretation analysis. / This thesis is divided into seven chapters. Chapter One is the introduction, a brief review of Wang Yi's life story and compositions, probing into the motives of Wang Yi's Chuci Zhangju. Chapter Two covers the formation process from the text Chuci to Chuci Zhangju, centering on the inherited relation between two texts. Chapter Three discusses the order of arrangement of Chuci Zhangju, suggesting that the order is related to Chuci Shiwen so as to analyze the structural system of canonical texts and its commentaries. Chapter Four centers on Wang Yi's commentaries, and further clarifies how Wang Yi has responded to predecessors' debate on QuYuan during Han Dynasty period, in order to construct and reinforce the authority for his interpretation. Chapter Five focuses on the rhymed annotation, pointing out the correlation between it and its features, forms, times, and predecessors. Chapter Six analyses the disputes over the issue Yi-yun and Huo-yue, suggesting that the existing text has been amended by people of former times, and has little relation with Wang Yi indeed. Chapter Seven is the conclusion, summarizing the key points and the major findings of the thesis. / 陳鴻圖. / Adviser: Yiu Kwan Wong. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 73-03, Section: A, page: . / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2010. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 150-167). / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Electronic reproduction. [Ann Arbor, MI] : ProQuest Information and Learning, [201-] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstracts in Chinese and English. / Chen Hongtu.

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