• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 33
  • 17
  • 17
  • 17
  • 17
  • 17
  • 17
  • 15
  • 7
  • 4
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 87
  • 87
  • 87
  • 87
  • 39
  • 32
  • 28
  • 12
  • 10
  • 10
  • 9
  • 8
  • 8
  • 8
  • 7
  • 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.
61

Aspects of the treatment of time in some modern English novelists.

Johnston, Patricia Marie. January 1948 (has links)
No description available.
62

Violent femmes : identification and the autobiographical works of Virginia Woolf, Radclyffe Hall, and Emily Carr

Stewart, Janice, 1966- January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
63

Recovering the common sense of high modernism : embodied cognition and the novels of Joyce, Faulkner, and Woolf

Clissold, Bradley January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
64

Metaphysical and occult explorations of H.D., D.H. Lawrence, and Virginia Woolf

Norris, Nanette Nina January 2001 (has links)
Thèse numérisée par la Direction des bibliothèques de l'Université de Montréal.
65

Autonomy, self-creation, and the woman artist figure in Woolf, Lessing, and Atwood

Sharpe, Martha January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
66

The carnivalesque and grotesque realism in modernist literature: the final novels of Ronald Firbank and Virginia Woolf

Unknown Date (has links)
Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal Pirelli by Ronald Firbank and Between the Acts by Virginia Woolf both liberate the text from the expected form to engage emotional awareness and instigate reform of societal standards. Employing Mikhail Bakhtin’s theories of the carnivalesque and grotesque realism as a means to create this perspective is unconventional; nevertheless, Firbank, predominantly misunderstood, and Woolf, more regarded but largely misinterpreted, both address sexuality and religion to parody what they believe to be the retrogression of civilization by narrating christenings, pageants, and other forms of carnival. Both novels forefront nonconformity, and the conspicuous influence of debasement is identified as a form of salient renewal. Christopher Ames, Melba-Cuddy Keane, and Alice Fox have already expressed remarkable insight into Woolf; unfortunately not a single scholar has approached Firbank’s text in this manner, and this essay discusses the value of both authors in the aspect of Bakhktin’s theories. / Includes bibliography. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2015. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
67

Narrative Topography: Fictions of Country, City, and Suburb in the Work of Virginia Woolf, W. G. Sebald, Kazuo Ishiguro, and Ian McEwan

McArthur, Elizabeth Andrews January 2012 (has links)
This dissertation analyzes how twentieth- and early twenty-first- century novelists respond to the English landscape through their presentation of narrative and their experiments with novelistic form. Opening with a discussion of the English planning movement, "Narrative Topography" reveals how shifting perceptions of the structure of English space affect the content and form of the contemporary novel. The first chapter investigates literary responses to the English landscape between the World Wars, a period characterized by rapid suburban growth. It reveals how Virginia Woolf, in Mrs. Dalloway and Between the Acts, reconsiders which narrative choices might be appropriate for mobilizing and critiquing arguments about the relationship between city, country, and suburb. The following chapters focus on responses to the English landscape during the present era. The second chapter argues that W. G. Sebald, in The Rings of Saturn, constructs rural Norfolk and Suffolk as containing landscapes of horror--spaces riddled with sinkholes that lead his narrator to think about near and distant acts of violence. As Sebald intimates that this forms a porous "landscape" in its own right, he draws attention to the fallibility of representation and the erosion of cultural memory. The third chapter focuses on Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go, a novel in which a cloned human being uses descriptions of landscape to express and, more often, to suppress the physical and emotional pain associated with her position in society. By emphasizing his narrator's proclivity towards euphemism and pastiche, Ishiguro intimates that, in an era of mechanical and genetic reproduction, reliance on perspectives formed in past and imagined futures can be quite deadly. The fourth chapter analyzes Ian McEwan's post 9/11 novel, Saturday--a reworking of Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway. In reading these two novels side-by-side, it reveals how London, its suburbs, and the English countryside might be imagined differently in the contemporary consciousness. Together these chapters investigate why novelistic treatments of the English landscape might interest contemporary readers who live outside England (and/or read these works in translation), especially during an era in which the English landscape has ceased to function as the real or metaphorical center of empire.
68

Literatura e pintura : correspondências interartísticas em Passeio ao Farol, de Virginia Woolf

Pedroso Júnior, Neurivaldo Campos January 2009 (has links)
A comparação entre as artes é um topois tão antigo em nossa cultura que remonta a aurora da civilização. Uma re-leitura atenta da História da Arte pode verificar que tão comum quanto as comparações eram as tentativas de se sistematizar uma escala hierárquica artística. Pretendemos nesta tese, propor uma revisão histórica que não apenas busque observar a forma como eram realizadas as correspondências interartísticas mas que vise também, com o olhar atento do presente, discutir a atualidade de teorias comumente empregadas ao longo da comparação entre as artes e, mais precisamente, as comparações entre Literatura e Pintura. A reflexão centrada na construção das imagens – no plano da narrativa tanto quanto no plano da pintura – assume singular importância para a pesquisa interartística, na medida em que funciona como ponto de convergência bem como de divergência entre aquelas duas artes. As discussões sobre a construção das imagens levam-nos, também, a uma outra problemática inerente aos estudos interartes, que é a leitura de imagens literárias e pictóricas. Ainda na esteira da revisão histórica, serão discutidas nesta tese as modificações ocorridas pela expressão Ut pictura poesis (Poesia é como pintura) , de Horácio, expressão esta que durante séculos designou os estudos comparativos entre Literatura e Pintura. A observação horaciana sobre a correspondência entre as artes permite-nos erigir uma discussão centrada na questão da representação e na passagem da mimesis à semiosis. O objetivo principal dessa tese é o de estabelecer e analisar a correspondência entre Literatura e Pintura no romance Passeio ao farol, de Virginia Woolf, para isso, procuraremos, inicialmente, demonstrar a importância da participação no Grupo de Bloomsbury – um dos grupos criativos mais importante do modernismo inglês - para a construção do projeto estético da escritora, considerando que o contato com pintores e críticos de arte proporcionou material importante para que Virginia Woolf promovesse a interlocução de seus romances com as Artes Plásticas. A análise mais pontual do romance Passeio ao farol estará calcada na relação que este mantém com as técnicas e métodos do Impressionismo e Pós-impressionismo pictórico. / The comparison of the arts is a topois so ancient in our culture that remounts to the dawn of the civilization. A carefull re-reading of the History of Art may verify that as common than the comparisons were the attempts to systematize an artistic hierarchical scale. We intend in this thesis to propose a historical review that does not only search to observe the form how were realized the interartistic correspondences but that also aims, with the attentive view of the present, to discuss the present of the theories commonly used along the comparison between the arts and, more precisely, the comparisons between Literature and Painting. The reflexion centrered in the constructions of images – in the plan of the narrative and in the plan of the painting – assumes singular importance to the interartistic research because it works as a point of convergence as well as divergence between those two arts. The discussions about the constructions of images take us, also, to another problematic concerning to the interarts studies, that is the reading of literary and pictorical images. Still in the path of the historical review, Will be discussed in this thesis the modifications occured by the expression Ut pictura poesis (Poetry is like painting), of Horacio, expression that centuries designed the comparative studies between Literature and Painting. The horacian observation about the correspondence between the arts allows us to erect a discussion centrered into the questiono f the representation and in the passage from mimesis to semiosis. The main objective of this thesis is to establish and analyze the correspondence between Literature and Painting in the novel To the lighthouse, of Virginia Woolf, for that pourpose, we intend, initialy, to demonstrate the importance of the participation in the Bloomsbury Group – one of the most creative groups of the english modernism – to the construction of the aesthetic Project of Virginia Woolf, considering that the contact with painters and art critics provided important material to Virginia Woolf to promote the interphrase of her novels with the Plastic Arts. The more ponctual analyze of To the lighthouse will be treated on the relation that this novel maintains with the thechniques and methods of the pictorical Impressionism and Posimpressionism.
69

Modernism for a small planet : diminishing global space in the locales of Conrad, Joyce, and Woolf

McIntyre, John, 1966- January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
70

"Almost unnamable" : suicide in the modernist novel

Chung, Christopher Damien, 1979- 20 September 2012 (has links)
Since Presocratic Greece, suicide in the West has been “known” and controlled, both politically and discursively. Groups as diverse as theologians and literary critics have propagated many different views of self-killing, but, determining its cause and moralizing about it, they have commonly exerted interpretive power over suicide, making it nameable, explicable, and predominantly reprehensible. The four modernist authors that I consider in this dissertation -- Ernest Hemingway, Joseph Conrad, Virginia Woolf, and William Faulkner -- break completely with the tradition of knowing suicide by insisting on its inscrutability, refusing to judge it, and ultimately rendering it “almost unnamable,” identifiable but indefinable. In For Whom the Bell Tolls, Victory, Mrs. Dalloway, and The Sound and the Fury, respectively, these authors portray illustrative, but by no means definitive, modernist self-killings; they construct a distinctive representational space around suicide, one free of causal, moral, theoretical or thematic meaning and, I argue, imbued with the power to disrupt interpretation. “‘Almost Unnamable’: Suicide in the Modernist Novel” examines the power of self-killing’s representational space in early twentieth-century fiction, arguing for its importance not only to the history of suicide in the West but also to the portrayal of death in the twentieth-century novel. / text

Page generated in 0.053 seconds