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A CRITICAL EDITION OF ANTONIO MIRA DE AMESCUA'S "EL MONTE DE LA PIEDAD," "LA FE DE HUNGRIA," AND "LA JURA DEL PRINCIPE"Maloney, James Charles, 1938- January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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The fictional Savonarola and the creation of modern ItalyHogan, Marina January 2009 (has links)
This thesis deals with Girolamo Savonarola and with his place in the imagination and collective memory of Italians from the early nineteenth century to the present. It examines the works of a variety of Italian fictional authors who turned to Savonarola in the belief that he could help them pursue objectives which, in their opinion, Italy and Italians should strive to achieve. At first, he was called upon by nationalist writers of the Risorgimento to inspire a people and convince it of the need for a free, united Italy. Later, as the new nation began to consolidate and Italians came to realize that unification had not delivered all that it had promised, Savonarola was employed in a negative way to show that military action and force were necessary to ensure Italy's progress to the status of great power. As Italians became more aware of the grave social issues facing their nation, he was called upon, once again, to help change social policy and to remind the people of its civic responsibility to the less fortunate members of society. The extent of Savonarola's adaptability is also explored through the analysis of his manipulation by the writers of Fascist Italy. Remarkably, he was used to highlight to Italians their duty to stand by Mussolini and the Fascist Regime during their struggle with the Catholic Church and the Pope. At the same time, however, one writer daringly used Savonarola's apostolate to condemn the Regime and the people's blind adherence to its philosophies. As Fascism fell and Italy began to rebuild after the Second World War, there was no longer a need for Savonarola to be used for political or militaristic ends. In recent times, emphasis has been placed on the human side of the Friar and he has been employed solely to guide Italians in a civic, moral and spiritual sense. From the Risorgimento to the present, the various changes in Italian history have been foreshadowed in the treatment of Savonarola by Italian fictional authors who turned to him in difficult times to help define what it is to be Italian.
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La teología de la Tebaida Estaciana el anti-virgilianismo de un clasicista /Criado, Cecilia. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität, Santiago de Compostela, 1997. / Includes bibliographical references (p. [239]-259) and index.
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La teología de la Tebaida Estaciana el anti-virgilianismo de un clasicista /Criado, Cecilia. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität, Santiago de Compostela, 1997. / Includes bibliographical references (p. [239]-259) and index.
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Embodied vision sublimity and mystery in the fiction of Flannery O'Connor /Hicks, Andrew Patrick, January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Tennessee, Knoxville, 2008. / Title from title page screen (viewed on Sept. 14, 2009). Thesis advisor: Thomas Haddox. Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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The religious crisis in the poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins.Giles, Roy James 31 January 2003 (has links)
Gerard Manley Hopkins produced poetry in the Victorian era which was noted for its originality of syntax and form. The essence underlying a large body of his poetry was his Catholic religion. His early religious poetry utilized nature-based metaphors to express his love of Christ and trace the immanence of God within nature. He borrowed heavily from the aesthetics of Pater and the philosophy of Duns Scotus. The dissertation explores these early influences and assesses their contribution to the formation of a unique religious interpretation of life and the formulation of an aesthetic congruent with this religion. The dissertation dissects early symptoms of religious doubt within his poetry and finally analyses his `Terrible Sonnet' phase in detail to ascertain whether the crisis so often described as occurring during this period was religious or merely reflected a loss of creative ability. / English Studies / MA (English)
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Hermenêutica filosófica literária em diálogo com a teologia: o problema do mal na Trilogia Cósmica de C. S. LewisVirmes Junior, Clacir 16 November 2015 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2015-11-16 / This thesis has as its goal to study the problem of evil through literature with the aid of the
literary philosophical hermeneutics. In order to develop this theme, in first place, we seek to
localize this study within the religion studies. We propose that hermeneutics can be a mediator
among philosophy, theology, religion studies, and their respective approaches to religion. Next,
we present exemplary how the discussions of philosophy, theology, and religion studies occur
inside literature. We show also, briefly, how the problem of evil is placed as a theme of interest
for philosophy and theology. At the end of this part, we present C. S. Lewis, the author whose
work Out of the Silent Planet is the object of our study, and we expose the methodology of this
thesis. In the second chapter, we discuss panoramically the problem of evil in philosophy and
theology. Then, we present a panel with the major studies that examine the interface between
the problem of evil and the works of C. S. Lewis. At the end of the chapter, we list the main
categories/aspects of the problem of evil which are articulated in the apologetic approach of
Lewis in The Problem of Pain, and that echoes in the fictional narrative of our object of study.
The main categories/aspects of the problem of evil, which relate to the first volume of the Space
Trilogy are: divine omnipotence, the fall of man, the human pain and the animal pain. In order
to study the problem of evil in the literature, we seek in the literary philosophical hermeneutics
of Paul Ricoeur a model of analysis. We abstract from the work Time and Narrative the
Ricoeurian triple mímesis as an itinerary for the study of Out of the Silent Planet. At last, we
apply the resulting model to the analysis of the first volume of the C. S. Lewis’s Space Trilogy.
In mímesis I, we study the fiction environment and the characters of the story. In mímesis II, we
locate the chapter in the work where the narrative can be seen as a whole. Then, we describe
how the categories/aspects of the problem of evil are articulated in this part of Out of the Silent
Planet, we verify how the narrative shares elements of the literature body of the time in which
it was produced, and how it breaks from this tradition. In mímesis III, we approach the values
and the ethical practical implications that can be verified in the reading of the book. C. S. Lewis
proposes in his narrative a theodicy from a theist Christian standpoint, using fiction to transmit
his way of understanding the problem of evil and its implications. / Esta dissertação tem como objetivo estudar o problema do mal através da literatura com o
auxílio da hermenêutica filosófica literária. Para desenvolver esse tema, em primeiro lugar,
buscamos localizar este estudo dentro das ciências das religiões. Propomos que a hermenêutica
pode ser uma mediadora entre filosofia, teologia, ciências das religiões e suas respectivas
abordagens à religião. Depois, apresentamos exemplarmente como as discussões da filosofia,
da teologia e das ciências das religiões ocorrem dentro da literatura. Mostramos também,
brevemente, como o problema do mal se coloca como tema de interesse para a filosofia e para
a teologia. No final da primeira parte, introduzimos C. S. Lewis, o autor cuja a obra Além do
planeta silencioso é o objeto do nosso estudo e expomos a metodologia dessa dissertação. No
segundo capítulo, discutimos panoramicamente o problema do mal na filosofia e na teologia.
Em seguida, apresentamos um painel com os principais estudos que examinam a interface entre
o problema do mal e as obras de C. S. Lewis. Ao final do capítulo, elencamos as principais
categorias/aspectos do problema do mal que são articuladas na abordagem apologética de Lewis
em O problema do sofrimento e que ecoam na narrativa ficcional do nosso objeto de estudo. As
principais categorias/aspectos do problema do mal que se relacionam com o primeiro volume
da Trilogia cósmica são: a onipotência divina, a queda do homem, o sofrimento humano e o
sofrimento animal. Para estudar o problema do mal na literatura, buscamos na hermenêutica
filosófica literária de Paul Ricoeur um modelo de análise. Abstraímos da obra Tempo e
narrativa a tríplice mimese ricoeuriana como roteiro para o estudo de Além do planeta
silencioso. Por fim, aplicamos o modelo resultante à análise do primeiro volume da Trilogia
cósmica de C. S. Lewis. Em mímesis I, estudamos a ambientação da ficção e os personagens da
história. Em mímesis II, localizamos o capítulo da obra onde a narrativa pode ser vista como
um todo. Então, descrevemos como as categorias/aspectos do problema do mal são articuladas
nessa parte de Além do planeta silencioso, verificamos como a narrativa compartilha elementos
do corpo literário da época em que foi produzida e como ela rompe com essa tradição. Em
mímesis III, abordamos os valores e as implicações éticas práticas que podem ser verificadas
na leitura do livro. C. S. Lewis propõe em sua narrativa uma teodiceia desde um ponto de vista
teísta cristão, utilizando-se da ficção para transmitir sua maneira de entender o problema do mal
e suas implicações.
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Le fait religieux dans les romans grecs : Un aperçu du paganisme à l’époque impériale ? / Religion in Greek fiction : places, people and actsPrivitera, Ludivine 05 December 2015 (has links)
Cette étude s’attache à l’observation et l’analyse du fait religieux dans les romans grecs. Les romans de Chariton, Xénophon d’Éphèse, Longus, Achille Tatius et Héliodore forment un corpus étonnamment cohérent, au vu de la distance temporelle qui les sépare. Ils se refusent pourtant à toute tentative de généralisation en matière religieuse. Prenant le contre-pied des études symbolistes, ce travail présente un relevé exhaustif de la religion observable dans les romans. Sont ainsi étudiés les lieux de culte et leur personnel, ansi que les actes rituels effectués par les personnages. La mise en rapport des cultes romanesques avec l'archéologie et les conceptions religieuses des époques classique et impériale se révèle un moyen de prendre la mesure d’une reconstruction romanesque de la réalité, passée ou contemporaine. Le rapport de valeur établi dans les romans entre sacrifice et prière ainsi qu’entre cultes collectif et personnel permet d'apercevoir certains aspects de la religion propres à l'époque impériale. Mis en relation avec l'usage rhétorique et romanesque du fait religieux, il permet également de définir le projet de chacun des romanciers, en matière religieuse et politique, mais aussi esthétique. / This thesis concentrates on the observation and analysis of places, people and acts of religion in Greek fiction. Charito, Xenophon Ephesius, Longus, Achilles Tatius and Heliodorus have produced suprisingly similar novels given that they were written at quite different times, although they still resist every attempt at religious generalisation. Traditionnal studies on the subject are symbolistic, on the contrary, here we will analyse the concrete aspects of religion, as they actually appear in these novels. So we will study the sacred places, the priests, and the rituals performed out by the novel's characters. The comparison of these fictionnal cults with archeological findings and religious conceptions from Imperial and Classical times will allow us to mesure the novelist's reconstruction of a reality, pertaining to their present or their past. The respective value given in these novels to sacrifice and prayer, to collective and individual cults shows some modern aspects of Greek religion in the Imperial era. If put in relation with the rhetorical and dramatic use of religion, this will also provide elements to define each novelist's religious, political but also esthetic project.
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Milton’s God and the Sacred imaginationKeim, Charles Andrew 05 1900 (has links)
The poetic effectiveness of Milton's God is a fundamental critical issue in Paradise
Lost, and the thesis addresses this concern by first surveying the various representations of
God contained in the Hebrew scriptures. To speak of the biblical God, one must first
understand the tremendous diversity o f his portrayals: he meets with some people in human
form, and with others as a voice, a light, or an awesome presence. Milton's God shares less
with the God o f Genesis than he does with the God of the prophets; yet Milton's
representation demonstrates that though Eden will be lost, God will continue to manifest
himself to those who seek his face. The cosmology of the epic reveals both the immensity o f
creation and the intimacy o f its Creator, since the entire world is filled with the glory o f God,
and yet the garden where Adam and Eve live is an archetypal sanctuary and their bower a
type of Inner Temple. Milton's justification o f God's ways rests upon the timelessness of
God; events that appear anachronistic at first are used to establish a context that looks beyond
the strict limits of human time. On the one hand, the Incarnation, Resurrection, and
Apocalypse are separate events that have not yet come to pass; but on the other hand, Milton
shows how these events are simultaneously present and completed in God's presence. From
God's throne, we participate in a cosmic perspective where the categories of past, present,
and future are compressed into one time: we are before and beyond time. Such a transcendent
perspective engenders a powerful truth: before Adam and Eve have been tempted, God's
grace and mercy have found them out and they have been restored. Though Eden must be
lost, the paradise of God's presence will remain. Adam and Eve will fall and the legacy of
their rash act will be paradoxically for all time, but not forever. God will restore his people
and wipe away their tears, and, in the context of Milton's depiction of God, that time of
redemption is now. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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God's Newer Will: Four Examples of Victorian Angst Resolved by HumanitarianismSpeegle, Katherine Sloan 05 1900 (has links)
One aspect of the current revaluation of Victorian thought and literature is the examination of the crisis of religious faith, in which the proponents of doubt and denial took different directions: they became openly cynical and pessimistic; they turned from religion to an aesthetic substitute; or they concluded that since mankind could look only to itself for aid, the primary duties of the individual were to find a tenable creed for himself and to try to alleviate the lot of others. The movement from the agony of doubt to a serene, or at least calm, humanitarianism is the subject of this study. The discussion is limited to four novelists in whose work religious doubt and humanitarianism are overt and relatively consistent and in whose novels the intellectual thought of the day is translated into a form appealing to the middle-class reader. Their success is attested by contemporary criticism and by accounts of the sales of their books; although their work has had no permanent popularity, they were among the most discussed authors of their time.
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