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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

La fabrique mémorielle et identitaire dans le théâtre contemporain taïwanais : exemple du Théâtre Golden Bough (Jin Zhi Yan She). / The factory of memory and identity in taiwanese contemporary theatre : the example of the Golden Bough Theatre (jin zhi yan she)

Huang, Shu Ping 30 June 2016 (has links)
Grotowski a influencé fortement, grâce au Théâtre U, les créations du Petit Théâtre taïwanais. Les recherches de Grotowski autour des techniques de la source, pour les artistes du Petit Théâtre taïwanais, revêt un caractère propre à leur culture populaire et les aident à s’identifier comme une communauté spécifique. Hérité du Théâtre U, le Théâtre Golden Bough ne s’exclut pas de la tendance à la recherche d’une nouvelle langue physique sur la base de techniques traditionnelles, mais progressivement, il s’est orienté vers un type de comédie musicale populaire. Le Théâtre Golden Bough met en scène de façon burlesque des stéréotypes de films et de séries télévisées du genre mélodrame. Le bricolage d’extraits de médias d’aujourd’hui avec des éléments d’hier construit une passerelle reliant les spectateurs contemporains à une « belle époque » empreinte de nostalgie des années 1960.Cette thèse décrypte la situation des Taïwanais souvent tiraillés entre des conflits identitaires. L’étude du Théâtre Golden Bough montre comment les artistes du théâtre ont représenté les différences culturelles, les tensions sociales, dans leurs mises en scène et le jeu des acteurs. Elle permet de mettre en exergue les logiques qui orientent l’évolution de la construction et l’affirmation d’une « identité taïwanaise ». / Since the abolition of the martial law in 1987, the Taïwanese have been trying to create a new cultural identity by defining Taïwan as a nation and as an ethnic group. The quest results from the long-term colonization of Taïwan by Japan and KMT. In this atmosphere, young university students created small-sized avant-garde theatres, the so-called Little Theatre, as a means to express their discontent and their resistance to the authoritarian government.Through the workshops and the project of “tracking back” of the U-Theatre of Taïwan, Grotowski, a western theater master, has greatly influenced the acting style of the Little Theatre. Grotowski’s works of “techniques of source” inspired the Taïwanese performers to find their own traditional physical techniques. Inherited from the U-Theatre and the practices of Grotowski, Golden Bough Theatre initially searches for a new sacred and abstract physical language based on traditional techniques. However, the effort gradually evolved into the creation of a type of comedy, where the stereotypes of movie and television series were performed in a burlesque way. By means of mixing the elements of modern and old days, Golden Bough Theatre has constructed a bridge bringing contemporary spectators back to a nostalgic “golden age” in 1960s. Golden Bough Theater is now considered as an authentic Taïwanese theatre. This thesis discusses the Little Theatre, whose plays often reflect taïwanese political situation and ethnic conflicts. The artists of the Little Theatre act out the cultural and social tensions. The study of Theatre Golden Bough allows us to understand the evolution of Taïwanese cultural identity from an artistic perspective.
2

Heroes with a Hundred Names: Mythology and Folklore in Robert Penn Warren's Early Fiction

Butts, IV, Leverett Belton 01 December 2009 (has links)
This dissertation examines Robert Penn Warren‘s use of Arthurian legend, Judeo-Christian folklore, Norse mythology, and ancient vegetation rituals in his first four novels. It also illustrates how the use of these myths helps define Warren‘s Agrarian ideals while underscoring his subtle references to these ideals in his early fiction.

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