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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.
131

Pour une approche systémique de la poésie de Victor Hugo et de Léopold Sédar Senghor

Seck, Djibril Diop, Papa Samba. January 2007 (has links)
Thèse de doctorat : Littérature comparée : Paris 12 : 2007. / Version électronique uniquement consultable au sein de l'Université Paris 12 (Intranet). Titre provenant de l'écran-titre. Bibliogr. : 308 réf. Index.
132

Un homme de trop à bord figuration du monde maritime dans les récits de fiction de Joseph Conrad, Herman Melville et Victor Hugo /

Moutet, Muriel. Colin, René-Pierre January 2001 (has links)
Thèse de doctorat : Lettres et Arts : Lyon 2 : 2001. / Titre provenant de l'écran-titre. Bibliogr.
133

L'Alexandrin chez Victor Hugo

Rochette, Auguste. January 1911 (has links)
Also published as thesis, Université de Montpellier. / Includes bibliographical references.
134

Re-Imagining Indians: The Counter-Hegemonic Represenations of Victor Masayesva and Chris Eyre

Cassadore, Edison Duane January 2007 (has links)
Contextualized within the discourse of United States nationalism, particularly the idea of Manifest Destiny in the nineteenth century, contemporary Native American representations from Victor Masayesva (Hopi) and Chris Eyre (Cheyenne/Arapaho) are counter-hegemonic since their representations interrogate stereotypes about Indians as "timeless," "props" who create "color background" for the dominant imagination. For example, in Imagining Indians (1992), Masayesva presents a range of interrogating viewpoints concerning the exploitation, commodification, and Hollywood set treatment of Native Americans. Here, the interviewees are not passive objects but active subjects who interrogate the dominant culture's assumptions about Indians. At the end of his film, images of various nineteenth-century tribal leaders constructed from George Catlin are destroyed through computer graphic manipulation. The camera's possessive gaze is also de-naturalized and rendered powerless. Chris Eyre uses a different representational tactic than Masayesva. Eyre's Skins (2002) seeks to build counter-hegemonic community through the love between two brothers. Despite rampant unemployment, poverty, and alcoholism, the brothers' love sustains them and their family and thus helps them to survive in the fractured community of Pine Ridge. Here, the Lakota philosophy concerning the cultural concepts of tisospaye ("your clan or family") and oyate ("your people") are significant since these ideas help the brothers to overcome personal struggles with alcoholism and the effects of the trickster figure of Iktomi. In the ultimate act of countering the magisterial gaze of U.S. nationalism, Skins ends with the cathartic throwing of blood-ret paint on George Washington in America's much-vaunted Mount Rushmore. In short, these contemporary representations from two key Native American filmmakers are counter-hegemonic since they assert agency in showing "get real" images of Indians and thus building community in the face of domination.
135

La poésie dissipée dans Notre-Dame de Paris, 1482 /

Trottier, André January 1990 (has links)
Notre-Dame de Paris 1482, by Victor Hugo, is a work which collects many genres. This poetry however gives all signs of clumsiness (let us think of Gringoire's play or of Quasimodo's "verses"), of vulgarity (the language used by the rogues, Jehan Frollo's drinking songs), of analphabetism (a condition shared by Esmeralda, Quasimodo, and "le peuple"), of the secular, even more of the profane (the heresy and anticlericalism present in the novel). The poetry of Notre-Dame de Paris is scattered (dissipated) into a number of under-texts which appear to perturb the rules of "good" literature. / A first part of this thesis examines a few characteristics of the writing of Hugo: its tendency toward a certain declassification, as well as some of its most important aesthetics, such as the grotesque and the excessiveness. A second section is an analysis of different aspects of Gringoire's morality, songs of Jehan and Esmeralda, Quasimodo's "poem"--these aspects being studied through the element of locality and the theme of the volatile.
136

The rhetoric of devotion : some neglected elements in the context of the early Tudor motet

Allinson, David John January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
137

Regard et vision dans Les misérables.

Degrange, Jeannine January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
138

Concerto in Two Paradigms : an autoethnography in words and music.

Mio, Victor, January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--University of Toronto, 2005.
139

Leon Caron and the music profession in Australia /

Smart, Bonnie Jane. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (M.Mus.)--University of Melbourne, 2003. / Typescript (photocopy). Includes bibliographical references( (leaves 62-67).
140

L'Alexandrin chez Victor Hugo

Rochette, Auguste. January 1911 (has links)
Also published as thesis, Université de Montpellier. / Includes bibliographical references.

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