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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.
1

L'Atlantide dans la série Stargate Atlantis (2004-2009) : un mythe remodelé par les valeurs spirituelles contemporaines

Lachance, Élisa 18 April 2018 (has links)
Depuis Platon, l'Atlantide n'a pas cessé de fasciner et a toujours représenté un terrain fertile pour l'imaginaire. Le mythe a été repris, recomposé et remodelé de multiples manières, de la théosophie de Mme Blavatsky jusqu'aux spiritualités contemporaines. Ce n'est donc pas un hasard si la télésérie Stargate Atlantis s'en inspire directement en l'adaptant à la mentalité d'aujourd'hui. On y raconte qu'il y a 10 000 ans, les Anciens auraient quitté l'Atlantide pour revenir sur Terre. La menace d'un ennemi en surnombre les aurait forcés à submerger la Cité et à quitter la planète sur laquelle elle se trouvait. Cette série constitue bien plus qu'une histoire de science-fiction. Le thème de l'Atlantide s'y trouve transformé, complètement remodelé, pour être en mesure de véhiculer des valeurs spirituelles qui sont celles de tous ceux qui sont à nouveau fascinés par les aventures extraordinaires des héros de cette série.
2

The attraction of sloppy nonsense: resolving cognitive estrangement in Stargate through the technologising of mythology

Whitelaw, Sandra January 2007 (has links)
The thesis consists of the novel, Stargate Atlantis: Exogenesis (Whitelaw and Christensen, 2006a) and an accompanying exegesis. The novel is a stand-alone tie-in novel based on the television series Stargate Atlantis (Wright and Glassner), a spin-off series of Stargate SG-1 (Wright and Cooper) derived from the movie Stargate (Devlin and Emmerich, 1994). Set towards the end of the second season, Stargate Atlantis: Exogenesis begins with the discovery of life pods containing the original builders of Atlantis, the Ancients. The mind of one of these Ancients, Ea, escapes the pod and possesses Dr. Carson Beckett. After learning what has transpired in the 10,000 years since her confinement, the traumatised Ea releases an exogenesis machine to destroy Atlantis. Ea dies, leaving Beckett with sufficient of her memories to reveal that a second machine, on the planet Polrusso, could counter the effects of the first device. When the Atlantis team travel to Polrusso, what they discover has staggering implications not only for the future of Atlantis but for all life in the Pegasus Galaxy. The exegesis argues that both science and science fiction narrate the dissolution of ontological structures, resulting in cognitive estrangement. Fallacy writers engage in the same process and use the same themes and tools as science fiction writers to resolve cognitive estrangement: they technologise mythology. Consequently, the distinction between fact and fiction, history and myth, is blurred. The exegesis discusses cognitive estrangement, mythology, the process of technologising mythology and its function as a novum that facilitates the resolution of cognitive estrangement in both fallacy and science fiction narratives. These concepts are then considered in three Stargate tie-in novels, with particular reference to the creative work, Stargate Atlantis: Exogenesis.

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