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Howard Roark as HeroCoffman, Sue Evelyn 06 1900 (has links)
This study will be an investigation of character, therefore an investigation of the salient characters which have stirred the interest that has made Ayn Rand such a popular novelist.
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Going the Distance: Themes of the Hero in Disney's HerculesBurchfield, Amy Elizabeth 01 December 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Disney's Hercules is an apt modern reception of the ancient mythology of Herakles, acknowledging ancient and modern sources surrounding three types of classical hero: the archetypal hero, influenced by the ideas of Joseph Campbell; the Pan-Hellenic hero, distilled from ancient Greek exempla of heroism from epic and other genres of ancient literature; and the tragic hero, inspired by the heroic criteria presented in Aristotle's Poetics. By adapting these heroic types from their traditional ancient source myths, Disney's Hercules produces a new, contemporary definition of heroism—one informed by modern, Western family values. This adaptation renews the power of the myth of Herakles for a modern era, whose image and characteristics have been changed and adapted since ancient times to suit each receiving culture's conception of true heroism.
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OdeIS/HeIs and “Homeward, Postmodern Epic Conventions in Eleni Sikelianos’ The California Poem”Rerick, Michael S. 06 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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A comparative study of the tragic and the existential hero: Agamemnon in Aeschylus and RitsosDemelis, Kostas D. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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The Journey of the FoolSullivan, Ellen Mowson 31 October 2005 (has links)
Design in the civic realm demands opportunities to recognize commonality. Architecture, therefore, must provide a call and response between visitor and space. This intimate dialogue can only occur where landscape elements speak a universal language. Revelatory, Allegorical, Cosmological and Vernacular methods of design have traditionally been employed to communicate in the landscape. This project explores the method of Archetypal design as a means to avoid the culturally-dependent, and hence, esoteric language of design and so create an exoteric language more appropriate for civic space. / Master of Landscape Architecture
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Eram deuses os guitarristas? Heróis e mitos no imaginário da cultura massiva / -Miranda Neto, Affonso Celso de 03 May 2017 (has links)
Desde a década de sessenta os guitarristas de rock são considerados ícones da cultura musical popular. Venerados por uma comunidade fiel de entusiastas, alguns deles são chamados de deuses, heróis e mitos. Suas histórias pessoais e artísticas são constantemente narradas e celebradas na mídia, tanto nos meios de comunicação tradicionais quanto nos ambientes digitais. E toda essa adoração pode ser visualizada concomitantemente no culto tecnológico à guitarra elétrica, um dos instrumentos musicais mais vendidos no mundo. Mesmo que tantos fãs, jornalistas e críticos musicais construam discursos fantásticos para se referir aos guitarristas heróis, uma investigação mais aprofundada sobre a estrutura dos arquétipos e símbolos presentes no compartilhamento de sentido entre os amantes do rock é uma tarefa ainda inacabada. Nossa hipótese parte do princípio de que diversos mitos e narrativas heroicas são atualizados continuamente nas práticas culturais contemporâneas cuja experiência transforma e orienta a visão de mundo dos atores sociais envolvidos na sua disseminação. Essa comunhão em torno da imagem sagrada dos guitar heroes extrapola a esfera artística e se constitui em um estilo de vida com significações múltiplas, sejam elas, comportamentais, estéticas e sexuais. O objetivo é compreender como essas representações sociais refletem e atualizam a própria visão idealizada de que como a sociedade se vê. Outro objetivo é enfatizar a importância desse fenômeno na prática de consumo associada à guitarra elétrica onde o mito desempenha uma função simbólica essencial. / Since the sixties, rock guitarists have been considered icons of popular music culture. Venerated by a faithful community of enthusiasts, some of them are called gods, heroes and myths. Their personal and artistic stories are constantly narrated and celebrated in the media, both in traditional media and in digital environments. And all this worship can be seen concomitantly in the technological cult of electric guitar, the one of the best-selling musical instruments in the world. Even though so many fans, journalists and music critics create fantastic speeches to refer to guitar heroes, further research into the structure of the archetypes and symbols present in the sharing of meaning among rock lovers is a task rarely addressed and still unfinished. Our hypothesis sustain that various heroic myths and narratives are continuously updated in contemporary cultural practices whose experience transforms and guides the world view of the actors-net involved in its dissemination. This communion around the sacred image of guitar heroes goes beyond the artistic sphere and constitutes a lifestyle with multiple meanings, that is, behavioral and aesthetic. The objective is to understand how these social representations reflect and actualize the idealized vision of how society sees itself. Another objective is to emphasize the importance of this phenomenon in the practice of consumption associated with electric guitar where the myth plays an essential symbolic function.
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The cinematic flaneur: manifestations of modernity in the male protagonist of 1940s film noirNolan, Petra Desiree Unknown Date (has links) (PDF)
The hardboiled hero is recognised as a central trope in the film noir cycle, and particularly in the classical noir texts produced in Hollywood in the 1940s. Like the films themselves, this protagonist has largely been understood as an allegorical embodiment of a bleak post-World War Two mood of anxiety and disillusionment. Theorists have consistently attributed his pessimism, alienation, paranoia and fatalism to the concurrent American cultural climate. With its themes of murder, illicit desire, betrayal, obsession and moral dissolution, the noir canon also proves conducive to psychoanalytic interpretation. By oedipalising the noir hero and the cinematic text in which he is embedded, this approach at best has produced exemplary noir criticism, but at worst a tendency to universalise his trajectory. This thesis proposes a complementary and newly historicised critical paradigm with which to interpret the noir hero. Such an exegesis encompasses a number of social, aesthetic, demographic and political forces reaching back to the nineteenth century. This will reveal the centrality of modernity in shaping the noir heros ontology. The noir hero will also be connected to the flaneur, a figure who embodied the changes of modernity and who emerged in the mid-nineteenth century as both an historical entity and a critical metaphor for the new subject.
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Beowulf: The Heroic and the MonstrousChen, Su-ling 08 September 2008 (has links)
This thesis aims to discuss the heroic and the monstrous aspects of Beowulf. In the heroic part, I will discuss Beowulf as a culture hero and a mythological hero; in the monstrous part, I will discuss Beowulf as a monster-man and monsters as man-monsters. Beowulf is about a hero who intends to prove himself by killing malicious monsters. The victory over the villains further brings Beowulf the character to the Geatish throne, though Beowulf¡¦s obsession with glory finally results in the fall of his kingdom. Beowulf¡¦s rise represents the rise of the Geatish kingdom and meritocracy; and his fall also triggers the fall of the kingdom. Beowulf¡¦s journey to the Danish kingdom also resembles Joseph Campbell¡¦s theories of mythological heroes.
Beowulf has been regarded as a hero for decades, but however heroic, Beowulf embodies some monstrous tendencies. His rationale to kill repugnant monsters and gain glory in return does not work on the combat with Grendel¡¦s mother and the fire dragon, since the ogress kills Aeschere in order to avenge her only son¡¦s death; and the dragon causes strife because of the theft. The monsters, on the other hand, are somewhat heroic since they know the ethics of vengeance.
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The cinematic flaneur: manifestations of modernity in the male protagonist of 1940s film noirNolan, Petra Desiree Unknown Date (has links) (PDF)
The hardboiled hero is recognised as a central trope in the film noir cycle, and particularly in the classical noir texts produced in Hollywood in the 1940s. Like the films themselves, this protagonist has largely been understood as an allegorical embodiment of a bleak post-World War Two mood of anxiety and disillusionment. Theorists have consistently attributed his pessimism, alienation, paranoia and fatalism to the concurrent American cultural climate. With its themes of murder, illicit desire, betrayal, obsession and moral dissolution, the noir canon also proves conducive to psychoanalytic interpretation. By oedipalising the noir hero and the cinematic text in which he is embedded, this approach at best has produced exemplary noir criticism, but at worst a tendency to universalise his trajectory. This thesis proposes a complementary and newly historicised critical paradigm with which to interpret the noir hero. Such an exegesis encompasses a number of social, aesthetic, demographic and political forces reaching back to the nineteenth century. This will reveal the centrality of modernity in shaping the noir heros ontology. The noir hero will also be connected to the flaneur, a figure who embodied the changes of modernity and who emerged in the mid-nineteenth century as both an historical entity and a critical metaphor for the new subject.
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Eram deuses os guitarristas? Heróis e mitos no imaginário da cultura massiva / -Affonso Celso de Miranda Neto 03 May 2017 (has links)
Desde a década de sessenta os guitarristas de rock são considerados ícones da cultura musical popular. Venerados por uma comunidade fiel de entusiastas, alguns deles são chamados de deuses, heróis e mitos. Suas histórias pessoais e artísticas são constantemente narradas e celebradas na mídia, tanto nos meios de comunicação tradicionais quanto nos ambientes digitais. E toda essa adoração pode ser visualizada concomitantemente no culto tecnológico à guitarra elétrica, um dos instrumentos musicais mais vendidos no mundo. Mesmo que tantos fãs, jornalistas e críticos musicais construam discursos fantásticos para se referir aos guitarristas heróis, uma investigação mais aprofundada sobre a estrutura dos arquétipos e símbolos presentes no compartilhamento de sentido entre os amantes do rock é uma tarefa ainda inacabada. Nossa hipótese parte do princípio de que diversos mitos e narrativas heroicas são atualizados continuamente nas práticas culturais contemporâneas cuja experiência transforma e orienta a visão de mundo dos atores sociais envolvidos na sua disseminação. Essa comunhão em torno da imagem sagrada dos guitar heroes extrapola a esfera artística e se constitui em um estilo de vida com significações múltiplas, sejam elas, comportamentais, estéticas e sexuais. O objetivo é compreender como essas representações sociais refletem e atualizam a própria visão idealizada de que como a sociedade se vê. Outro objetivo é enfatizar a importância desse fenômeno na prática de consumo associada à guitarra elétrica onde o mito desempenha uma função simbólica essencial. / Since the sixties, rock guitarists have been considered icons of popular music culture. Venerated by a faithful community of enthusiasts, some of them are called gods, heroes and myths. Their personal and artistic stories are constantly narrated and celebrated in the media, both in traditional media and in digital environments. And all this worship can be seen concomitantly in the technological cult of electric guitar, the one of the best-selling musical instruments in the world. Even though so many fans, journalists and music critics create fantastic speeches to refer to guitar heroes, further research into the structure of the archetypes and symbols present in the sharing of meaning among rock lovers is a task rarely addressed and still unfinished. Our hypothesis sustain that various heroic myths and narratives are continuously updated in contemporary cultural practices whose experience transforms and guides the world view of the actors-net involved in its dissemination. This communion around the sacred image of guitar heroes goes beyond the artistic sphere and constitutes a lifestyle with multiple meanings, that is, behavioral and aesthetic. The objective is to understand how these social representations reflect and actualize the idealized vision of how society sees itself. Another objective is to emphasize the importance of this phenomenon in the practice of consumption associated with electric guitar where the myth plays an essential symbolic function.
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