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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.
11

Salomé dans la France musicale au début du XXe siècle. Approche comparative de La Tragédie de Salomé de Florent Schmitt et de Salomé d’Antoine Mariotte / Salome in music in France at the beginning of the twentieth century. A comparative study of ‘The Tragedy of Salome’ by Florent Schmitt and of ‘Salome’ by Antoine Mariotte

Bonin, Déborah 29 January 2011 (has links)
L’histoire biblique de Salomé est un vaste sujet qui passionne artistes et écrivains depuis longtemps. En musique, il semble toutefois plus présent au début du XXe siècle. L’œuvre testamentaire sur le sujet demeure encore aujourd’hui l’opéra de Richard Strauss, créé à Dresde en 1905. Pourtant, maints compositeurs vont également traiter la légende qui met en cause Salomé à la même époque, dont notamment Florent Schmitt, avec son ballet La Tragédie de Salomé et Antoine Mariotte qui s’inspirera, tout comme Strauss, de la pièce théâtrale éponyme d’Oscar Wilde pour écrire son opéra.Considérant la date de création de l’œuvre de Mariotte (1908) et l’existence du ballet de Schmitt composé en 1907, notre objectif est de comprendre pourquoi ces deux compositeurs se sont intéressés quasi simultanément en France à ce même sujet. Pour cela, nous nous concentrerons sur les rapports d’ordres historique, social, esthétique et musical qui uniront Salomé au symbolisme, avant d’orienter notre travail vers d’autres tendances de cette époque, comme l’orientalisme voire l’aspect psychanalytique du sujet, ainsi que vers l’étude des créations et des grandes représentations de l’œuvre.À travers cette approche comparative de La Tragédie de Salomé de Florent Schmitt et de la Salomé d’Antoine Mariotte, suivant leur conception, leur organisation et leur réception, nous pourrons conclure, outre la fascination, à la puissante représentativité de ce sujet dans la France musicale du début du XXe siècle. / The biblical story of Salome is a vast subject that has inspired artists and writers alike for years. In music however, the story was evoked the most at the beginning of the twentieth century. To this day, the work of reference on the subject remains Richard Strauss’s opera composed in Dresden in 1905. And yet, numerous composers of the same era were to use the legend of Salome, namely Florent Schmitt with his ballet ‘The Tragedy of Salome’ and Antoine Mariotte. The latter, like Richard Strauss, sought inspiration for his opera from the play of the same name by Oscar Wilde.Bearing in mind the date of conception of Mariotte’s work (1908) and the existence of Schmitt’s ballet composed in 1907, our aim is to understand why these two composers, both in France, became interested in the same subject at practically the same time. To this end, we will concentrate on historical, social, artistic and musical accounts that link Salome to symbolism. Our work will then explore other trends of the time, such as orientalism and even the psychoanalytical nature of the subject. The final part of our study will deal with the premières and major performances of the work. Through this comparative study of the conception, organisation and reception of ‘The Tragedy of Salome’ by Florent Schmitt and of ‘Salome’ by Antoine Mariotte, we can not only conclude that the subject was a source of great fascination, but also that it had a strong influence on music in France at the beginning of the twentieth century.
12

Composing Symbolism's Musicality of Language in Fin-de-siècle France

Varvir Coe, Megan Elizabeth, 1982- 08 1900 (has links)
In this dissertation, I explore the musical prosody of the literary symbolists and the influence of this prosody on fin-de-siècle French music. Contrary to previous categorizations of music as symbolist based on a characteristic "sound," I argue that symbolist aesthetics demonstrably influenced musical construction and reception. My scholarship reveals that symbolist musical works across genres share an approach to composition rooted in the symbolist concept of musicality of language, a concept that shapes this music on sonic, structural, and conceptual levels. I investigate the musical responses of four different composers to a single symbolist text, Oscar Wilde's one-act play Salomé, written in French in 1891, as case studies in order to elucidate how a symbolist musicality of language informed their creation, performance, and critical reception. The musical works evaluated as case studies are Antoine Mariotte's Salomé, Richard Strauss's Salomé, Aleksandr Glazunov's Introduction et La Danse de Salomée, and Florent Schmitt's La Tragédie de Salomé. Recognition of symbolist influence on composition, and, in the case of works for the stage, on production and performance expands the repertory of music we can view critically through the lens of symbolism, developing not only our understanding of music's role in this difficult and often contradictory aesthetic philosophy but also our perception of fin-de-siècle musical culture in general.
13

Salomé danse-t-elle ? Enquête sur les représentations littéraires et chorégraphiques d'un mythe féminin aux XIXe et XXe siècles / Does Salome dance? Investigating literary and choreographic representations of a feminine myth in the 19th and the 20th century

Dariane, Cynthia 02 December 2013 (has links)
Depuis toujours, Salomé hante les esprits et se profile dans les créations artistiques. Elle évolue selon les siècles, changeant selon l’humeur des artistes, assouvissant leur désir créateur. Cependant, ce sont les artistes symbolistes et décadents qui vont donner à la danseuse biblique son véritable essor et l’imposer comme une véritable figure archétypale, avec la danse au cœur de cette recréation. L’art de Terpsichore s’empare également de Salomé et les techniques scéniques et chorégraphiques permettent l’affirmation de nouvelles idées sociales, de courants de danse novateurs ainsi que le développement de nouveaux savoir-faire artistiques à travers la figure de la fille d’Hérodiade. Notre travail va porter non pas sur Salomé dans l’absolu, mais sur sa danse en tant que telle, et plus particulièrement sur la façon dont elle est retranscrite dans les textes et sur scène. Il s’agira donc de se demander, à travers la figure de la danseuse, quelles sont les connivences entre les deux langages, celui du corps, des gestes, et celui des mots. En quoi Salomé arrive-t-elle à conjuguer influence artistique et révolution socioculturelle ? / Salomé has always been haunting our minds and sneaking into artistic creations. She evolves through the centuries, changing with artists' state of mind and meeting their creative desire. However, symbolist and decadent artists are those who gave the biblical dancer her real take-off, imposed her as a true archetypal figure, with dance at the heart of the recreation. Terpsichore's art also takes hold of Salome and stage and chorography techniques enable the assertion of new social ideas, innovative dance trends and the development of new artistic know-hows through the myth of Herodias. This work tackles not Salome in absolute, but rather her dance, and more specifically the way it is expressed in writings and on stage. We shall see, through the figure of the dancer, what complicity bond the two languages, that of the body and the moves, and that of the words. How does Salome mix artistic influence and social and cultural revolution?
14

Telling History Through the Stories of Women: Julia Alvarez's In the Time of the Butterflies and In the Name of Salomé

Carlson, Nicole Marie 15 July 2006 (has links) (PDF)
My thesis discusses the ways in which Julia Alvarez's In the Time of the Butterflies (1994) and In the Name of Salomé (2000) are revolutionary texts contesting traditional, male dominated history and redirecting historical and communal foci to the lives of Dominican women. I employ Walter Benjamin's theories found in his essays "The Storyteller" (1936) and "On the Concept of History" (1940) to assist my exploration of Alvarez's questions concerning the power and effect of storytelling, and the importance of reconstructing various historical voices and images, specifically, the importance of reconstructing female voices in male dominated cultures. I discuss the female-narrated component to Dominican history which Alvarez creates in her reconstruction of the lives of these women. Alvarez confronts the challenge of breaking these women out of their marginalized status by combining fiction with history in her reconstruction of their lives. Alvarez assumes the multifaceted role of mediator, story-teller, and historian as she remembers and re-presents Dominican history through the eyes of women who lived, experienced, and affected change within the Dominican Republic. Without merely act as a reporter of historical "facts," Alvarez reconstructs the lives of these women fictionally, applying her impressions and ideas about the personalities, feelings, and thoughts of these women, and historically, utilizing first and secondhand accounts and information about the women. Ultimately, the women are presented as individuals but are also connected to a collective memory and history. As individuals with human characteristics, the women are no longer inaccessible legends. As members of a collective memory and history, the women are redeemed from the isolating effect of their patriarchal society which would have women remain silent. Due to Alvarez's reconstruction, their stories finally have the potential for further dissemination in the future with the possibility to affect other oppressed peoples. Thus, Alvarez's reconstruction of the resistance of a few women in Dominican history produces the capacity for additional resistance by Alvarez's audience to the same forces that these women were combating which continue to exist today — forces such as patriarchy, dictatorial governments, fascism, and economic disparity.
15

L'Anti-Salomé, représentations de la féminité bienveillante au temps de la Décadence (1850-1920) / The Anti-Salome, representations of benevolent femininity in the Time of Decadence

Daouda, Marie Kawtar 12 December 2015 (has links)
À la charnière entre deux siècles, Salomé fait office de lieu commun inévitable de la littérature et des arts. Cependant, aux côtés de la femme fatale, s'affirme la présence discrète mais tout aussi inévitable de la féminité fragile et bienveillante, formée sur le modèle de la princesse de conte et de l'héroïne de roman gothique, mais surtout sur celui de la vierge et martyre du roman édifiant, qu'il soit antiquisant ou contemporain. Parfois discrète jusqu'à l'illisibilité, cet archétype n'est légitimé dans sa fonction bienveillante que par un sacrifice. La signification religieuse du bouc émissaire reste à la fois lisible et efficace dans les structures narratives du roman, mais aussi dans le détail de l'écriture de ces personnages. Les figures mariales, magdaléennes ou féeriques sont soumises à la même épreuve de destruction, par laquelle l'édification qu'elles symbolisent se fait littéralement construction de sens, juxtaposition d'éléments esthétiques disparates mais efficaces par lesquels un personnage en vient à représenter allégoriquement la création artistique elle-même. En reliant le milieu du XIXe siècle aux années 1920 et en mettant les plus connus des héritiers de Baudelaire en perspective avec ceux dont le nom commence à peine à revenir à la postérité, l'enjeu de la recherche est d'établir dans quelle mesure ces représentations de la féminité bienveillante relèvent d'une permanence, d'un monument – au sens de monumentum – où la fin de siècle va non seulement contempler la mort d'une époque révolue, mais concentrer tout ce qui sert, à l'aube du XXe siècle, à théoriser l'art idéaliste. / At the crossroads between two centuries, Salome plays the part of a mandatory commonplace in art and literature. Nevertheless, next to the femme fatale and just as unavoidable, stands a fragile and benevolent form of feminity, molded in the cast of the fairytale princess and theGothic novel heroine, but inspired above all by the Virgin and Martyr of the edifying novel, be it antique or contemporary. As it might be discrete enough to become unreadable, this archetype's benevolence cannot be legitimated without a sacrifice. The religious meaning of the scapegoat remains just as obvious and as efficient in the novels' narrative structure, as well as in the detailsthrough which such characters are built. Marial, magdalenian and farylike characters must undergo the same destruction trial, through which their edifying meaning becomes a litteral building-up up meaning, by juxtaposing dissimilar and yet efficien aesthetic elements which turn the character into an allegory of artistic creation. By linking mid-19th century and the 1920es and by weaving a link between the most famous of Baudelaire's heirs and the ones whose name is just merging out of oblivion, the purpose of this study is to analyse how much these representations of benevolent femininity must be seen as a permanence, as a monument – or as a monumentum – where late-19th century will not only gaze a the death of a declining era, but concentrate all what will be used to theorize idealist artistic movements on the edge of the 20th century.

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