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Ray Bradbury's theory of writing : principles and practiceAnderson, John B. January 1972 (has links)
Ray Bradbury's theory of writing and his writing practice concerning his views on the nature and role of the writer in society. The basic sources utilized were Bradbury's essays on writing, and his fictional works dealing with literature and authors. The thesis dealt in depth with his theory of writing found in his essay, "How to Keep and Feed a Muse." Although stories about writing and writers were taken from nearly every book Bradbury has written, particular emphasis was placed on Fahrenheit 451 and stories from books such as The Martian Chronicles which concerned bookburning societies. This thesis also considered critics who maintained differences of opinions about Bradbury's subject matter and his outlook on the future role of writing.In addition, this thesis discussed Bradbury's development as a writer as it related to his views on the nature of the writer. Finally, Bradbury's fiction exemplified his views on the roles of the writer as healer, moralist and prophet.
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Conversations with Ray BradburyAggelis, Steven L. Bickley, R. Bruce, January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Florida State University, 2003. / Advisor: Dr. R. Bruce Bickley, Jr., Florida State University, College of Arts and Sciences, Dept. of English. Title and description from dissertation home page (viewed Mar. 3, 2004). Includes bibliographical references.
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The life and works of William Batchelder Bradbury, 1816-1868Wingard, Alan Burl, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis--Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 1973. / Xiii, 575 leaves : port. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 558-571).
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The Center for Ray Bradbury Studies: A Case Study in Sustaining a Single Author ArchiveAukerman, Jason Michael 12 1900 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / The Center for Ray Bradbury Studies (cited also as the “Bradbury Center” or the “Center”) is a single author archive, museum, and outreach center housed in the Institute for American Thought, located in the School of Liberal Arts at IUPUI. This dissertation employs a case study methodology to explore the complex issue of single author archive management and sustainability as it applies to the Bradbury Center by extending the research process beyond working with primary sources and published materials.
The applied research project unfolded in two phases. The first involved an intensive four-day on-site consultation in which five professional archivists and preservation experts from across the Midwest visited the Bradbury Center and examined its collections and policies. Following their visit, the consultants prepared recommendations concerning artifacts, manuscripts, correspondence, physical layout, access, operational procedures, processing priorities, and environmental/climate control for artifacts. The on-site consultation team also informed objectives, goals, and strategies for addressing the preservation needs of the Center’s vast and varied collections, aiding in systematically moving forward with curatorial initiatives, and planning for general organizational development.
The second research phase involved site visits to five peer institutions to tour facilities, interview directors and archivists about best practices, and established a plan for adapting these practices to the Bradbury Center. Findings from both research phases inform the Bradbury Center’s immediate and long-term plans for center staff, fundraising, spatial expansion and renovation, and the Center’s strategy for identifying key constituencies as it endeavors to serve a broad spectrum of public and academic audiences through various outreach and programming initiatives.
Upon completion of the case study field research, a formal report was prepared. That report serves as the cornerstone for this applied dissertation. Additional chapters cast a vision for the Bradbury Center and address potential opportunities to serve the Indianapolis region by tapping into tourism markets, conventions, and local cultural festivals and celebrations while also developing into an international research hub as the sole entity that preserves the material legacy of Ray Bradbury. The introductory chapter situates the Bradbury Center within the legacy of the central figure of the Center—Ray Bradbury.
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Shadows of the Ravine: Mortality-Themed Discards from Bradbury's Illinois NovelsHarley, Gabriel M. 30 September 2009 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / This thesis offers a focused examination of thematically-related story-chapters that Ray Bradbury originally intended for his first novel concept—Summer Morning, Summer Night, a book set in the vivid memories of his own small-town Midwest childhood. The stories at the heart of this thesis were discarded from the project (often referred to by Bradbury as the “Illinois novel”) by the time that he published a portion of the original project as Dandelion Wine in 1957. As that novelized story cycle is perhaps the best-known of all Bradbury’s “Green Town” books, I intend to use it as a springboard for identifying and examining those stories that were discarded, left unfinished, or eventually published as stand-alone tales in other outlets. Since all of these stories were eliminated before Dandelion Wine emerged as the first published portion of the larger Illinois novel, I will further explore how their hypothetical presence or actual absence may have affected Dandelion Wine as a whole, from inception and development to publication and popular reception, as well as investigate what these tales may reveal about the evolution of Bradbury as a writer.
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"A world without real deliverances" : liberal humanism in the novels of Malcolm BradburyElphick, Linda January 1988 (has links)
Known in the United States for his critical studies of twentieth-century fiction, Malcolm Bradbury is himself a creator of fiction, the author of four novels. All four are satires. All confront well-meaning but feckless English liberal humanists with the doctrinaire. All reveal that meaning well and doing justly are not the same, and that private values--a belief in the dignity of the individual and in his right to work out his own destiny--are insufficient, even, sometimes, harmful. Yet Bradbury consistently reveals the doctrinaire as far more harmful, concerned not at all about individual men. The doctrinaire is ruthless and inhumane, whether presented as a formulaic version of liberal humanism itself, in Eating People is Wrong (1959); as the politicized liberalism of post-McCarthy America, in Stepping Westward (1965); as the radicalism of the early nineteen seventies, in The History Man (1975); or as the Marxism of a Soviet satellite, in Rates of Exchange (1983). His novels all depict something that Bradbury himself named in a commentary upon his first: "an ironic world, a world without real deliverances." Several critics maintain that Bradbury's novels are profoundly, deceitfully, conservative beneath a surface liberalism. However, as this first long study of the novels attempts to demonstrate, their conservatism is not so much political as cultural. The great Western systems, capitalism and communism, no longer offer much that is conducive to man's well-being; only liberal humanism, in its respect for the individual, holds forth some faint hope for humanity. So implies Malcolm Bradbury, whose stance in the novels is largely apolitical and who exposes the folly of his liberal humanists and the wickedness of their more doctrinaire antagonists with equally devastating wit. / Department of English
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Poststructuralism, postmodernism and British academic attitudes : with special reference to David Lodge, Malcolm Bradbury and Gabriel JosipoviciBostock, Paddy January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
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Shadows of the ravine mortality-themed discards from Bradbury's Illinois novels /Harley, Gabriel M. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Indiana University, 2009. / Title from screen (viewed on September 30, 2009). Department of English, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI). Advisor(s): Jonathan R. Eller, William F. Touponce, Stephen L. Fox. Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 68-70).
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Fahrenheit 451: A Descriptive BibliographyBarrett, Amanda Kay 10 October 2011 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / This document offers scholarly researchers, students and general readers a reliable, genealogically-based descriptive bibliography of all U.S. and British publications of Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 (1953). The driving force behind this thesis is the desire to preserve, catalog, describe and archive a work of literature that has stood the test of time and continues to be an influential milestone of American culture well into the twenty-first century.
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The automatic eye : mechanization of the self in postwar American dystopiasBaker, Brian January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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