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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.
41

Creed and credibility : aesthetic consequences of faith in the fiction of Graham Greene

Newman, Gillian January 1978 (has links)
Beliefs a writer holds dear clearly influence the selection and treatment of ideas in his fiction: the purpose of this study is to examine the effect of Greene's religious sensibility on theme, mode, and characterization in a representative selection of his novels. From the late 30's to the early 50's, Greene's novels deal with dilemmas of faith that beset his Catholic characters; In The Power and the Glory (1940) he achieves startling and dramatic effects from the religious paradigms at the core of the novel. After the contentious success of the so-called 'Catholic' trilogy, The End of the Affair (1951) illustrates the difficulties to which an overzealous concern with specific issues of doctrine can lead when religious premises conflict directly with artistic requirements. From this point on, the perspective of Greene's novels is less and less specifically religious as he turns to considerations of a wider moral and social kind. In The Quiet American (1955), Greene explores the more existentialist questions of the freedom of choice and the responsibility of individual existence; however, his long preoccupation with Catholicism still intrudes in ways detrimental to the established development of the fiction. With the publication of The Comedians (1966) it is evident that Greene has moved even further away from the crises of faith that hounded his earlier characters as he focuses on an uncommitted anti-hero surrounded by an assortment of ideologies and forms of commitment. The development in Greene's religious vision has made him see and respond to the world of experience differently so that the themes and techniques of his fiction have changed accordingly. The broadening of his religious concerns has resulted in fiction that is less doctrinaire, less controversial, and perhaps more accessible. The negative presentation of the necessity of any form of faith through an anti-heroic central character has meant some loss of the intensity he could achieve as a novelist of urgent spiritual conflicts in his 'Catholic' period: it has also meant he could transcend specific issues of doctrine that could be so binding on his literary imagination, enabling him to create a more detached and witty representation of his broader religious ideas. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
42

Mathematics and Late Elizabethan drama, 1587-1603

Jarrett, Joseph Christopher January 2017 (has links)
This dissertation considers the influence that sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century mathematical thinking exerted on popular drama in the final sixteen years of Elizabeth I’s reign. It concentrates upon six plays by five dramatists, and attempts to analyse how the terms, concepts, and implications of contemporary mathematics impacted upon their vocabularies, forms, and aesthetic and dramaturgical effects and affects. Chapter 1 is an introductory chapter, which sets out the scope of the whole project. It locates the dissertation in its critical and scholarly context, and provides a history of the technical and conceptual overlap between the mathematical and literary arts, before traversing the body of intellectual-historical information necessary to situate contextually the ensuing five chapters. This includes a survey of mathematical practice and pedagogy in Elizabethan England. Chapter 2, ‘Algebra and the Art of War’, considers the role of algebra in Marlowe’s Tamburlaine plays. It explores the function of algebraic concepts in early modern military theory, and argues that Marlowe utilised the overlap he found between the two disciplines to create a unique theatrical spectacle. Marlowe’s ‘algebraic stage’, I suggest, enabled its audiences to perceive the enormous scope and aesthetic beauty of warfare within the practical and spatial limitations of the Elizabethan playhouse. Chapter 3, ‘Magic, and the Mathematic Rules’, explores the distinction between magic and mathematics presented in Greene’s Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay. It considers early modern debates surrounding what magic is, and how it was often confused and/or conflated with mathematical skill. It argues that Greene utilised the set of difficult, ambiguous distinctions that arose from such debates for their dramatic potential, because they lay also at the heart of similar anxieties surrounding theatrical spectacles. Chapter 4, ‘Circular Geometries’, considers the circular poetics effected in Dekker’s Old Fortunatus. It contends that Dekker found an epistemological role for drama by having Old Fortunatus acknowledge a set of geometrical affiliations which it proceeds to inscribe itself into. The circular entities which permeate its form and content are as disparate as geometric points, the Ptolemaic cosmos, and the architecture of the Elizabethan playhouses, and yet, Old Fortunatus unifies these entities to praise God and the monarchy. Chapter 5, ‘Infinities and Infinitesimals’, considers how the infinitely large and infinitely small permeate the language and structure of Shakespeare’s Hamlet. It argues that the play is embroiled with the mathematical implications of Copernican cosmography and its Brunian atomistic extension, and offers a linkage between the social circles of Shakespeare and Thomas Harriot. Hamlet, it suggests, courts such ideas at the cutting-edge of contemporary science in order to complicate the ontological context within which Hamlet’s revenge act must take place. Chapter 6, ‘Quantifying Death, Calculating Revenge’, proposes that the quantification of death, and the concomitant calculation of an appropriate revenge, are made an explicit component of Chettle’s Tragedy of Hoffman. It suggests that Chettle enters two distinctly mathematical models of revenge into productive counterpoint in the play in order to interrogate the ethics of revenge, and to dramatise attempts at quantifying the parameters of equality and excess, parity and profit.
43

Der Roman Noir und die populäre Unterwelt moderner Literatur : : Dashiell Hammett, William Faulkner und Graham Greene /

Koch, Markus, January 1900 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Dissertation--Kassel, 2004.
44

Exploring students’ experiences of arts-based pedagogy: An a/r/tographical journey

Purton, Fiona L Unknown Date
No description available.
45

Projective well log analysis : Plummer Field, Greene County, Indiana

Bertl, Brooks R. January 1992 (has links)
The purpose of this investigation is to determine the effectiveness of projective well log analysis based upon data collected from Plummer Field located in Greene County, Indiana. Projective well log analysis consists of analyzing spontaneous potential (SP) logs from existing oil and gas wells in order to determine SP gradients that may be applied to locate other undiscovered hydrocarbon accumulations. Projective well log analysis was developed in 1963 by S.J. Pirson, however, the specific parameters employed in the Plummer Field investigation were developed in 1988 by Dr. R.H. Fluegeman in order to apply to the geologic conditions in southwestern Indiana.The results of this investigation indicate that SP gradients can be interpreted to determine hydrocarbon production potential in Plummer Field with a 62% to 73% certainty. Given the petroleum industry exploration success rate of 3% to 20%, it is believed that the SP gradients established in Plummer Field can be used to identify economical hydrocarbon accumulations in areas of similar geology such as other portions of the Illinois Basin and the Michigan Basin. / Department of Geology
46

Graham Greene's use of evil in selected novels

Robb, Paul H. January 1988 (has links)
There is no abstract available for this dissertation. / Department of English
47

Reconfiguring memories of honor William Raoul's manipulation of masculinities in the new South, 1872-1918 /

Blankenship, Steven, January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Georgia State University, 2007. / Title from file title page. Jared Poley, committee chair; Glenn Eskew, Alecia Long, committee members. Electronic text (265 p.) : digital, PDF file. Description based on contents viewed Jan. 22, 2008. Includes bibliographical references (p. 239-265).
48

The grim word : 'home' in fiction by Graham Greene /

Cowgill, Geoff, January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--Eastern Illinois University, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves [73]-[79]).
49

"A complicated scene of difficulties" North Carolina and the revolutionary settlement, 1776-1789 /

Maass, John Richard, January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2007. / Microfiche of typescript. UMI Number: 32-68957. Includes bibliographical references. Available online via OhioLINK's ETD Center.
50

Der eintluss des rhythmus auf silbenmessung, wortbildung, formenlehre und syntax bei Lyly, Greene und Peele ...

Ziesenis, Otto, January 1915 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Kiel. / Lebenslauf. Cover title.

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