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The reception of Elizabethan and Jacobean drama in the Romantic period: the case of John FordFung, Kai Chun January 2007 (has links)
Master of Arts (Research) / An account of the critical reception of Ford's plays in the Romantic Period, in which the influence of Longinus's notions of the sublime is emphasized.
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Hagiography, Teratology, and the "History" of Michael JacksonO'Riley, Kelly M 11 August 2011 (has links)
Before his death, Michael Jackson arguably was one of the most famous living celebrities to walk the planet. Onstage, on air, and onscreen, he captivated the attention of millions of people around the world, whether because they loved him or loved to hate him. In an attempt to explain his popularity and cultural influence, I analyze certain theoretical and methodological approaches found in recent scholarship on western hagiographic and teratological texts, and apply these theories and methods to selected biographies written on Michael Jackson. By interpreting the biographies in this way, I suggest why saints, monsters, and celebrities have received considerable attention in their respective communities, and demonstrate how public responses to these figures are contextual, constructed, and often contradictory.
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Slothrop's Sublime: Perversion and Paranoia in Gravity's RainbowSimony, Christopher 11 May 2012 (has links)
This paper examines how the protagonist of Gravity’s Rainbow, Tyrone Slothrop, seeks subjective fixity in the historical and postmodern sublime. Using an approach that draws upon the theories of Freud, Lacan, and Zizek, the essay argues that while Slothrop indulges his own paranoia and commits acts of increasing perversion to assert self, these attempts actually blur the lines of identity instead of presenting an autonomous being.
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The natural sublime : romanticism and the aesthetics of wilderness /Hitt, Christopher J., January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2001. / Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 277-286). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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William Wordsworth and the Great Mother : an object relation analysis of the archetypal feminine and poetry of the sublime /Walz, Robert J. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Lehigh University, 2001. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 365-371).
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Romanticism and Mortal ConsciousnessJohnston, Richard Rutherford 08 June 2015 (has links)
The Romantic period coincides with a fundamental shift in Western attitudes toward death and dying. This dissertation examines how Romantic poets engage this shift. It argues that "Romantic mortal consciousness" - a form of mortal reflection characteristic of English Romantic poetry - is fundamentally social and political in its outlook and strikingly similar to what one might now call a liberal social consciousness. During the Romantic period, mortally conscious individuals, less able or willing to depend on old spiritual consolations, began to regard Death not as the Great Leveler of society but rather as a force that sealed social inequality into the records of history. Intimations of mortality forced one to look beyond the self and, to quote Keats, "think of the Earth." This dissertation considersthe development of Romantic mortal consciousness. Death’s transformation from the Great Leveler of social inequality into its crystallizing agent is evident in the Romantic response to Graveyard School poetry. This is the subject of my first chapter, which focuses on Gray’s "Elegy" and Wordsworth’s "The Ruined Cottage." Chapter Two examines Lord Byron’s Cain, where mortal consciousness transforms Cain’s personal lament about mortality into a protest on behalf of a doomed race. Cain anticipates death studies by dramatizing the shift from what Ariès calls the "death of the self" to the "death of the other" and by recognizing that mortality is essentially a cultural construct. However, the other idea of mortality as a solitary reckoning with death does not disappear entirely. Poems by Hemans and Keats, the subjects of my third and fourth chapters, show how the "death of the self" flourishes as the other side of Romantic mortal consciousness. Romantic mortal consciousness has centripetal and centrifugal aspects. It exhorts the ruminative soul to engage sympathetically with the suffering of others. At the same time, it turns the soul inwards, bringing the fate of the self into focus. One aim of this dissertation is to unify these aspects through an analysis of the sublime. In Chapter Five, which focuses on Byron and Smith, I illustrate the connection between mortal consciousnesses, social or political consciousness, and aesthetic awareness.
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"Powers of misrecognition": masculinity and the politics of the aesthetic in the fiction of John BanvilleThomson, Christopher James January 2008 (has links)
This thesis analyses the links between masculinity and representations of power in the fiction
of John Banville and argues that his use of the category of the aesthetic,especially the sublime,
strategically presents the masculine subject as the site of a loss of power, often figured as selffragmentation
or self-delusion. This strategy is particularly evident in Banville’s approach to
problems of representation, especially with regard to narrating the past, the construction of
systems of knowledge, and efforts to achieve or articulate self-presence balanced by an ethical
relation to the other. In each case, gender difference and sexual desire act as markers within
Banville’s key themes as part of the enactment of failure that defines the male protagonist.
Existing gender criticism has examined many of the representations of women and femininity
in Banville’s fiction, but has fully considered neither the ways in which these representations
contribute to the construction of the male narrative subject that is the origin or focus of the
text, nor the gender politics of the various articulations of creativity and intellectual activity
valorised by Banville. Drawing upon Nick Mansfield’s work on cultural masochism, the thesis
argues that the disavowal of power, or its entanglement in unresolvable dialectics, constitutes
a subtle technique for managing power relations, the origins of which lie in the ambivalent relation
to power at the heart of subject-formation. Contrary to the view that Banville’s fiction
directly de-centres or deconstructs subjectivity, it shows that by aestheticising the de-centred
subject the fiction works to neutralise difference and ultimately recuperate unity within elastic,
even contradictory, narratives of self. Through readings of seven of Banville’s novels, it
demonstrates that the misrecognitions and ironies that drive his fiction present epistemological
and representational failures within an aesthetic closure that asserts itself, paradoxically,
through these very failures to establish closure. Crucially, it is in the language of desire that
this paradox is expressed. The thesis concludes that the logic of the sublime enables Banville
to dramatise a fragmented masculinity that has lost its basis in traditional representational and
philosophical ideals, but that it simultaneously brings about a recuperation and consolidation
of the very power structures his writing appears to disavow.
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On the sublime foundations of beauty and an aesthetic of engagement for planting design in landscape architecture / Title on signature form: On the sublime foundations of beauty and an aesthetics of engagement for planting design in landscape architectureSerrano, Nicholas A. 17 December 2011 (has links)
Traditional formalism of planting design within landscape architecture has two central faults; the objectification of plants and a focus on visual perception. This thesis proposes the correct appreciation of planting design is an aesthetic of engagement founded on interaction with the sublime in nature. Plants are the materiality of nature and design seeks to engender a phenomenological experience of landscape perceived through a series of events or encounters with the sublime. The aesthetic of engagement in planting design is articulated in four ways; direct engagement, indirect engagement, ethical engagement, and therapeutic engagement. Examples from contemporary projects verify an aesthetic of engagement for planting design. This thesis fills a gap in knowledge by providing a philosophical conceptualization of the aesthetics of planting design and a language through which to carry on dialogue over its presence. / The formalist tradition -- Sublime foundations of contemporary planting design -- The aesthetics of engagement -- A concluding example. / Department of Landscape Architecture
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The reception of Elizabethan and Jacobean drama in the Romantic period: the case of John FordFung, Kai Chun January 2007 (has links)
Master of Arts (Research) / An account of the critical reception of Ford's plays in the Romantic Period, in which the influence of Longinus's notions of the sublime is emphasized.
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Science fiction and the sublimeJorgensen, Darren J. January 2005 (has links)
[Truncated abstract] This thesis makes three assertions. The first is that the sublime is a principal pleasure of science fiction. The second is that the conditions for the emergence of both the sublime and science fiction lie in the modern developments of technology, mass economy and imperialism. Maritime and optical technologies; the imagination that accompanied imperialism; and the influence of capitalism furnished the cognition by which the pleasures of both science fiction and the sublime came into being. The third claim is that a historical conception of the sublime, one that changes according to the different circumstances in which it appears, offers privileged insights onto changes within the genre. To make such extensive claims it has been necessary to make a cognitive map of the development of both the sublime and science fiction. This map reaches from the Ancient Romans, Lucian and Longinus; to Thomas More, Jonathan Swift, Johannes Kepler, Voltaire and Immanuel Kant; to Edgar Allan Poe, Mary Shelley, Jules Verne and H.G. Wells. This thesis then examines how the features of these fictions mutate in the twentieth-century fiction of A.E. van Vogt, Clifford Simak, Philip K. Dick, Arthur C. Clarke, Ivan Yefremov, the Strugatsky brothers, J.G. Ballard, Pamela Zoline, Ursula Le Guin, Vonda McIntyre, Octavia Butler, Kim Stanley Robinson, Stephen Baxter, William Gibson, Ken MacLeod and Stanislaw Lem. These writers are considered in their own specific periods, and in their national contexts, as they create pleasures that are contingent upon changes to their own worlds. In representing these changes, their fictions defamiliarise the anxieties of the reading subject. They transcend the contradictions of their times with a sublime that betrays its own conditions of transcendence. The deployment of the sublime in these texts offers a moment of critical possibility, as it betrays the fantasies born of a subject's relation to their world
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