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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.
71

Shades of Pope : Byron's development as a satirist

Woodhouse, David Robert Sterry January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
72

Significant Parallels in the Heroes of John Dryden and Lord Byron

Kennelly, Laura B. 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis includes a study of common historical and biographical elements in the lives of Dryden and Byron, a comparison of the literary principles and achievements of Dryden and Byron, a study of the concept of the hero, and a comparison of the heroes of Dryden and Byron.
73

A Higher Life : A Postcolonialist Analysis of Coetzee's Disgrace

Vanky, Anna-Marie January 2008 (has links)
J M Coetzee’s Disgrace deals with race and power in contemporary, post-colonial South Africa. This prize-winning novel is written after the country's first all-race elections, in 1994. It has therefore most often been analyzed as a representative for the writing of the new South Africa, where the social problems relating binary oppositions such as black – white, native – immigrant, powerless – powerful, are stressed. More specifically the shift of power within the above mentioned pairs is in focus. This is also the case for this essay, but instead of analyzing the realistic elements in the book it will examine the imaginary complexity of the opera Byron in Italy, which is created by the protagonist, David Lurie. This essay aims to widen the concept of “native” regarding post-colonial theory by looking at the peculiarity of Lurie’s situation; him being a representative of the white population in South Africa. By using post-colonial theory this essay aims at showing that Lurie can be seen as a white native, and that his process of writing the opera can be seen as symbolizing the evolutionary phases a colonized nation goes through in order to develop a national culture, as described by Franz Fanon.
74

Het byronianisme in Nederland ...

Schults, Ulfert, January 1929 (has links)
Proefschrift--Utrecht. / "Stellingen": [4] p. laid in.
75

Het byronianisme in Nederland ...

Schults, Ulfert, January 1929 (has links)
Proefschrift--Utrecht. / "Stellingen": [4] p. laid in.
76

Adventurous and contemplative : a reading of Byron's Don Juan

Addison, Catherine Anne January 1987 (has links)
This dissertation on Byron's Don Juan begins with a history and analysis of the stanza form. Since ottava rima is a two-fold structure, comprising an alternately rhyming sestet followed by an independent couplet, it encourages the expression of dialectical ideas. Byron's prosodic virtuosity uses this potential to create a multivalent tissue of tones which is essentially—and almost infinitely—ironic. A view of prosody is developed here which is unique in its perception of the poem's existence in terms of a reading that unfolds in "real time." For various reasons, "reader-response" critics have not yet taken much cognizance of prosody. Don Juan is a good testing-ground for their approach because its narrator constantly addresses his reader, insisting on a present time which actively accumulates a past and projects a future, as a reader's consciousness moves sequentially forward through the text. The present time of the verse rhythms is the present time of the discourse, which is often most self-reflexive in the famous "digressions." Some of these begin with an epic simile whose vehicle grows out of proportion to its tenor; others are triggered by an interruption of the story, as the narrator—like a Renaissance improvisor in ottava rima— suddenly addresses his audience directly. Still other digressions are not metaleptic leaps from a fictional to a "real" world, or from one fictional world to another, however; they are the result of the narrator's tendency to linger too long in one world, elaborating descriptions until his story is forgotten. Despite the poem's many-voiced, digressive insouciance, an investigation of its moral and metaphysical components reveals that its irony has limits. Maugre those critics who would claim Don Juan as the paradigmatic work of unlimited, infinitely regressive Romantic irony, the issue of political liberty is not to be joked about, unlike the problem of erotic love. At this stable point in an otherwise absurd universe, Byron reveals a non-ironic self under the ironic mask. More effectively than traditional autobiography, because it is enacted rather than reported, this poem recreates its author dramatically, in terms of a shifting triangular relationship between narrator, protagonist and reader. The temporal locus of this relationship is a fictional present tense grounded in the "real" present time of a reading of the poem. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
77

The Juvenalian Influence on Byron's Don Juan

Dunson, Diane Gardner 08 1900 (has links)
This thesis is a comparative study of Juvenal and Lord Byron, with emphasis on the particularly kindred aspects of the poets' works.
78

The fairness of Byron’s judgments : (his attitude to his own time and his influence in Europe).

Mackenzie, Mary Elizabeth. January 1937 (has links)
No description available.
79

Worlds of their own: space-consciousness in the works of Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, and Keats /

Sullivan, Mary Ann January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
80

"The age of oddities" Byronism and the fictional representations of Byron /

Davis, G. Todd. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Miami University, Dept. of English, 2003. / Title from second page of PDF document. Includes bibliographical references (p. 212-224).

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