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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

Satire's Liminal Space: The Conservative Function of Eighteenth-Century Satiric Drama

Morton, Sheila Ann 18 March 2004 (has links) (PDF)
The eighteenth century is famous for producing literary satire, primarily in verse (and later prose) form. However, during this period, a new dramatic form also arose of which satire was the controlling element. And like the writers of prose and verse satires, playwrights of dramatic satire claimed that their primary aim was the correction of moral faults and failings. Of course, they did not always succeed in this aim. History has shown a few, however, to have had a significant impact on the ideas and lives of their audiences. This thesis is an attempt to demonstrate how these satiric dramas achieved their reformative aims by tracing the theatrical experience of an eighteenth-century audience through Victor Turner's stages of liminality. Turner explains the different ways in which specific genres of theatre (1) create a performance space that is apart from, but still draws symbolically on, the outside world, (2) invite the participation of their audiences in that space, and (3) urge audiences to act in different ways as they leave the theatre space. By examining plays in these ways, we can see how the plays affected the ideas and outlooks of audience members. Because satiric drama invited a high level of participation from audience members, because it invited them into a very "liminal" space, it frequently served to sway audience members' tastes, and in some cases even helped to revolutionize social and literary institutions.
2

Movimentos de escritura em John Gay, autor de 'The Beggar's Opera'

Ardais, Débora Amorim Garcia January 2008 (has links)
O presente estudo examinou a trajetória literária do autor inglês John Gay sob o viés da sua correspondência, com o objetivo de encontrar exemplos de seu processo de criação nas suas cartas. Selecionou-se um corpus composto de cartas escritas por e para John Gay, famoso pela criação da ballad opera The Beggar's Opera, escrita em 1728. Dentre os seus mais importantes correspondentes, destacam-se os escritores Alexander Pope e Jonathan Swift. A análise das cartas mostrou que seu objetivo ia muito além da simples comunicação. Foi possível examinar algumas etapas do processo de criação do escritor através de trechos de poemas, alusões literárias e informações de fontes contidas nas cartas. Tais descobertas servem para afirmar o caráter literário da correspondência, que pode servir como espaço de expressão artística e território da criação. O questionamento decorrente dessa afirmação é acerca dos limites que separam os dois gêneros, literário e epistolográfico. / This study examined the literary career of the eighteenth century writer John Gay from the point of view of his letters, with the aim of finding examples of his creation process in his correspondence. A corpus consisting of letters written by and to John Gay, who is famous for his ballad opera The Beggar's Opera written in 1728, was selected. Among his most important correspondents were the famous writers Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift. The analysis of the letters showed that their aim reached beyond communication. It was possible to examine some stages of the author's creation process through lines of his poems, literary allusions and sources expressed in his letters. These findings affirm the literary character of the correspondence, as a way of artistic expression and territory of creation. This statement raises a question about the border between literary genre and correspondence.
3

Movimentos de escritura em John Gay, autor de 'The Beggar's Opera'

Ardais, Débora Amorim Garcia January 2008 (has links)
O presente estudo examinou a trajetória literária do autor inglês John Gay sob o viés da sua correspondência, com o objetivo de encontrar exemplos de seu processo de criação nas suas cartas. Selecionou-se um corpus composto de cartas escritas por e para John Gay, famoso pela criação da ballad opera The Beggar's Opera, escrita em 1728. Dentre os seus mais importantes correspondentes, destacam-se os escritores Alexander Pope e Jonathan Swift. A análise das cartas mostrou que seu objetivo ia muito além da simples comunicação. Foi possível examinar algumas etapas do processo de criação do escritor através de trechos de poemas, alusões literárias e informações de fontes contidas nas cartas. Tais descobertas servem para afirmar o caráter literário da correspondência, que pode servir como espaço de expressão artística e território da criação. O questionamento decorrente dessa afirmação é acerca dos limites que separam os dois gêneros, literário e epistolográfico. / This study examined the literary career of the eighteenth century writer John Gay from the point of view of his letters, with the aim of finding examples of his creation process in his correspondence. A corpus consisting of letters written by and to John Gay, who is famous for his ballad opera The Beggar's Opera written in 1728, was selected. Among his most important correspondents were the famous writers Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift. The analysis of the letters showed that their aim reached beyond communication. It was possible to examine some stages of the author's creation process through lines of his poems, literary allusions and sources expressed in his letters. These findings affirm the literary character of the correspondence, as a way of artistic expression and territory of creation. This statement raises a question about the border between literary genre and correspondence.
4

Movimentos de escritura em John Gay, autor de 'The Beggar's Opera'

Ardais, Débora Amorim Garcia January 2008 (has links)
O presente estudo examinou a trajetória literária do autor inglês John Gay sob o viés da sua correspondência, com o objetivo de encontrar exemplos de seu processo de criação nas suas cartas. Selecionou-se um corpus composto de cartas escritas por e para John Gay, famoso pela criação da ballad opera The Beggar's Opera, escrita em 1728. Dentre os seus mais importantes correspondentes, destacam-se os escritores Alexander Pope e Jonathan Swift. A análise das cartas mostrou que seu objetivo ia muito além da simples comunicação. Foi possível examinar algumas etapas do processo de criação do escritor através de trechos de poemas, alusões literárias e informações de fontes contidas nas cartas. Tais descobertas servem para afirmar o caráter literário da correspondência, que pode servir como espaço de expressão artística e território da criação. O questionamento decorrente dessa afirmação é acerca dos limites que separam os dois gêneros, literário e epistolográfico. / This study examined the literary career of the eighteenth century writer John Gay from the point of view of his letters, with the aim of finding examples of his creation process in his correspondence. A corpus consisting of letters written by and to John Gay, who is famous for his ballad opera The Beggar's Opera written in 1728, was selected. Among his most important correspondents were the famous writers Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift. The analysis of the letters showed that their aim reached beyond communication. It was possible to examine some stages of the author's creation process through lines of his poems, literary allusions and sources expressed in his letters. These findings affirm the literary character of the correspondence, as a way of artistic expression and territory of creation. This statement raises a question about the border between literary genre and correspondence.
5

Žebrácká opera v Berlíně, v Praze a ve Vídni. Divadelní hra Bertolta Brechta a její tři inscenace / Threepenny Opera in Berlin, Prague and Vienna. The Play by Bertolt Brecht and Its Three Stage Productions

Hagenhoferová, Monika January 2013 (has links)
This diploma thesis deals with the theatre play The Threepenny Opera by the German playwright Bertolt Brecht. The first part contains a formal analysis and a content interpretation of this literary work. This analysis is used as a basis for the second part of the thesis, which contains the description and comparison of three stage productions of the play in the theatres in three different European capitals between 2007 and 2011. These theaters are: The Berliner Ensemble, The National Theatre in Prague and The Volkstheater in Vienna.

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