• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 22
  • 5
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 47
  • 31
  • 18
  • 11
  • 11
  • 10
  • 8
  • 8
  • 7
  • 6
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 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

“There’s no question that this is torture!” Electrocuting Patriotic Fervour in Sam Shepard’s <em>The God of Hell</em>

Weiss, Katherine 01 January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Excerpt: Sam Shepard’s The God of Hell, which premiered Off-Broadway in late October of 2004, was negatively received by New York critics.
12

Sam Shepard

Weiss, Katherine 13 February 2014 (has links)
Unrivalled in its coverage of recent work and writers, The Methuen Drama Guide to Contemporary American Playwrights surveys and analyses the breadth, vitality and development of theatrical work to emerge from America over the last fifty years.This authoritative guide leads you through the work of 25 major contemporary American playwrights, discussing more than 140 plays in detail. Written by a team of 25 eminent international scholars, each chapter provides:· a biographical introduction to the playwright's work; · a survey and concise analysis of the writer's most important plays; · a discussion of their style, dramaturgical concerns and critical reception; · a bibliography of published plays and a select list of critical works.Among the many Tony, Obie and Pulitzer prize-winning playwrights included are Sam Shepard, Tony Kushner, Suzan-Lori Parks, August Wilson, Paula Vogel and Neil LaBute. The abundance of work analysed enables fresh, illuminating conclusions to be drawn about the development of contemporary American playwriting.
13

‘…long before the stars were torn down...: The Music of Bob Dylan and Sam Shepard

Weiss, Katherine 09 October 2008 (has links)
No description available.
14

A True and Lonesome West: The Spaces of Sam Shepard and Martin McDonagh

Dyne, Sarah A 18 December 2012 (has links)
In this project, I explore how Sam Shepard and Martin McDonagh treat concepts of space (both on stage and within a larger context that expands beyond the theatre), and I seek to identify how underlying anxieties about a mythologized past become manifest in the relationships between characters and landscapes by examining heterotopic and liminal elements in their scripts.
15

The Directing of Buried Child

Hotze, Robert George 08 August 2007 (has links)
No description available.
16

Scattered Data Visualization Using GPU

Cai, Bo 27 May 2015 (has links)
No description available.
17

The disintegration of a dream : a study of Sam Shephard's family trilogy, Curse of the starving class, Buried child and True west

Watt, Diane Lilian 11 1900 (has links)
The family trilogy, Curse of the Starving Class, Buried Child and True West, presents Sam Shepard's strong bond with his culture and his people, illustrates an intense connection with the land, and reveals a deep longing for the traditions of the past, through the dramatisation of the betrayal of the American Dream. Although obviously part of the American tradition of family drama, Shepard never completely conforms, subverting the genre by debunking the traditional family in order to make a statement about the present disintegration of the bonds of family life and modern American society. In the trilogy Shepard decries the loss of the old codes connecting with his despair at the debasement of the ideals of the past and the demise of the American Dream. Finally, the plays insist on the importance a new set of tenets to supplant the sterile ethics of modern America / M.A. (English)
18

The disintegration of a dream : a study of Sam Shephard's family trilogy, Curse of the starving class, Buried child and True west

Watt, Diane Lilian 11 1900 (has links)
The family trilogy, Curse of the Starving Class, Buried Child and True West, presents Sam Shepard's strong bond with his culture and his people, illustrates an intense connection with the land, and reveals a deep longing for the traditions of the past, through the dramatisation of the betrayal of the American Dream. Although obviously part of the American tradition of family drama, Shepard never completely conforms, subverting the genre by debunking the traditional family in order to make a statement about the present disintegration of the bonds of family life and modern American society. In the trilogy Shepard decries the loss of the old codes connecting with his despair at the debasement of the ideals of the past and the demise of the American Dream. Finally, the plays insist on the importance a new set of tenets to supplant the sterile ethics of modern America / M.A. (English)
19

Le spectateur implicite dans le théâtre de Sam Shepard : les œuvres du Magic Theatre (1976- 1983) / The Implied Spectator in Sam Shepard's plays : His work at the Magic Theatre (1976- 1983)

Schlenker, Caroline 02 December 2016 (has links)
Influencé par le monde artistique et théâtral qui se transformait autour de lui pendant les années soixante et soixante-dix, Shepard va expérimenter lors de sa résidence d’écriture au Magic Theatre, une nouvelle manière d’écrire le théâtre pour ses spectateurs, à travers la confrontation entre texte et scène, personnages et acteurs, action dramatique et performance.Comment lire alors les pièces de cette période? Notre thèse propose d’examiner comment l’acteur, le son, la performance et l’expérience sensorielle du spectateur, sont inscrits dans les textes de notre corpus. Notre travail vise à montrer, à travers la prépondérance intentionnelle de ces éléments dans le texte, comment le texte de Shepard ne s’adresse pas à un simple lecteur mais à un lecteur/spectateur. En effet, contrairement aux autres textes littéraires, le texte de théâtre trouve son actualisation sur scène. Le spectateur est donc celui qui construit le sens in fine de la pièce de théâtre. Notre thèse examine en quoi les pièces de Shepard doivent, pour être comprises, être en partie élucidées par la scène. Notre travail a comme objectif donc d’identifier des éléments scéniques inscrits dans le texte de théâtre et de proposer des outils opérationnels pour les décrire. Il s’agit d’élaborer les prémisses d’une théorie du spectateur implicite pour l’oeuvre de Shepard, dans le but de pouvoir étudier plus rigoureusement le programme de réception inscrit dans son oeuvre. / Influenced by the evolution of the artistic and theatrical context during the nineteen sixties and the nineteen seventies, Shepard began to experiment at the Magic Theatre with an innovative approach to writing theater for his audience. His approach was to confront the text and the stage, the characters and the actors, dramatic action and performance.How should one read Shepard’s plays from this period? Our study suggests that the actor, sound, performance and the sensory experience of the spectator are written within the texts of our corpus. Through our observation of the predominance of these elements in the texts themselves, our thesis demonstrates how Shepard’s text does not simply address the reader but reaches out to the reader/ spectator. The theatrical text, unlike other literary texts, reveals its essence on stage. In a play, it is the spectator that builds the meaning in fine. Our thesis examines how Shepard’s plays need to be clarified by the stage in order to be understood. The objective of our study is to identify the stage elements written within the text, and to draw out some methodological tools to describe them. The idea is to elaborate a theory of the “implicit spectator” for Shepard’s work, with the aim of studying more rigorously the reader’s response program inscribed in his works.
20

Funkce vyprávění v moderním americkém dramatu: mapování lidského vědomí / The Functions of Storytelling in Modern American Drama: Mapping human consciousness

Bălan, Daniela Andreea January 2020 (has links)
1 Thesis Abstract The present thesis explores six plays written by three (post)modern American playwrights - David Mamet's Sexual Perversity in Chicago and Oleanna, Sam Shepard's Buried Child and True West, and Suzan-Lori Parksʼ The America Play and Topdog/Underdog in order to define and analyze the functions of performative storytelling in the dramatic texts as well as its effects on the characters' identity. In Reading Narrative, J. Hillis Miller analyzes performative storytelling as a human shaped process that people use in order to translate events into meaning and meaning into shared information. Moreover, in Narrative as Performance, Marie Maclean demonstrates the importance of this device in recalibrating human memory and communication and in enriching the traditional mimetic process used in theatre. These ideas are closely followed in the aforementioned American plays through the lenses of the most prominent themes of the end of the twentieth century American theatre. Each of the three American writers uses performative storytelling to delineate socio-political themes. David Mamet comments on the artificiality of the American self, Sam Shepard speaks about the importance of familial past and relationships, whereas Suzan-Lori Parks describes the impact of major national narratives on the...

Page generated in 0.0403 seconds