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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.
1

Une autre avant-garde la métaphysique, le retour à la tradition et la recherche religieuse dans l'œuvre de René Daumal et Daniil Harms /

Ogarkova, Tetyana Jouanny, Sylvie. January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Thèse de doctorat : Lettres : Paris 12 : 2007. / Titre provenant de l'écran-titre. Pagination : 598 p. Bibliogr. : 405 réf. Index.
2

A literatura infantil de Daniil Kharms: tradição e modernidade / Childrens literature of Daniil Kharms: tradition and modernity

Bianca Alves da Paixão 21 September 2015 (has links)
Esta dissertação busca analisar os aspectos da tradição e da modernidade literária presentes na prosa infantil do escritor soviético Daniil Kharms (1905 1942), tendo em vista o diálogo que estabelecem com os contos maravilhosos e a observância dos processos de atualização do gênero, decorrente das políticas educacionais, na URSS. Os trabalhos do escritor dedicados à criança foram os únicos publicados em vida, num contexto de forte censura. Desse modo, tal obra ganha importância tanto para a compreensão dos pressupostos estéticos de Kharms, quanto para a percepção das transformações ocorridas na literatura infantil soviética a partir da imposição do realismo como método de representação. Para tanto, selecionamos um corpus de trinta e um contos, traduzidos diretamente do russo. / This dissertation aims to analyze aspects of tradition and modern literature presented in the childrens prose of the Soviet writer Daniil Kharms (1905 1942), in view of the dialogue that it establishes with fairy tales and the observance of gender upgrade, resulting from education policies in USSR. The writers work dedicated to children were the ones he could publishes in life, due to a background of strong censorship. Thus, this work becomes important both for understanding Khamss aesthetic assumptions and for the perception of the transformations occurred in Soviet childrens literature, after the imposition of realism as the only possible representation method. To compose our corpus, we selected thirty-one stories directly translated from Russian.
3

A literatura infantil de Daniil Kharms: tradição e modernidade / Childrens literature of Daniil Kharms: tradition and modernity

Paixão, Bianca Alves da 21 September 2015 (has links)
Esta dissertação busca analisar os aspectos da tradição e da modernidade literária presentes na prosa infantil do escritor soviético Daniil Kharms (1905 1942), tendo em vista o diálogo que estabelecem com os contos maravilhosos e a observância dos processos de atualização do gênero, decorrente das políticas educacionais, na URSS. Os trabalhos do escritor dedicados à criança foram os únicos publicados em vida, num contexto de forte censura. Desse modo, tal obra ganha importância tanto para a compreensão dos pressupostos estéticos de Kharms, quanto para a percepção das transformações ocorridas na literatura infantil soviética a partir da imposição do realismo como método de representação. Para tanto, selecionamos um corpus de trinta e um contos, traduzidos diretamente do russo. / This dissertation aims to analyze aspects of tradition and modern literature presented in the childrens prose of the Soviet writer Daniil Kharms (1905 1942), in view of the dialogue that it establishes with fairy tales and the observance of gender upgrade, resulting from education policies in USSR. The writers work dedicated to children were the ones he could publishes in life, due to a background of strong censorship. Thus, this work becomes important both for understanding Khamss aesthetic assumptions and for the perception of the transformations occurred in Soviet childrens literature, after the imposition of realism as the only possible representation method. To compose our corpus, we selected thirty-one stories directly translated from Russian.
4

In All Seriousness: Play, Knowledge, and Community in the Union of Real Art

Lussier, Benjamin David January 2021 (has links)
Taking its direction from seminal works in the field of play theory, this dissertation examines ludic elements in the textual practices and intellectual community of the Union of Real Art (Ob”edinenie real’nogo iskusstva or OBeRIu). I use the concept of play to elucidate how the group used literature as an unconventional medium for the pursuit of special forms of knowledge and to explore the intimate genre of performance that shaped the association’s collective identity as a group of writers and thinkers. The four chapters that comprise this dissertation each examine one facet of how play shaped the OBeRIu’s shared literary practice. In the first chapter, I contrast the performative strategies of the OBeRIu members (or the oberiuty) with those of the Russian Futurists, demonstrating that the OBeRIu approach to spectacle possesses an ‘existential’ dimension that is quite alien to that of Futurism. I argue that Futurist performance is best characterized by what Hans-Georg Gadamer has called “aesthetic differentiation,” a hermeneutic tradition that foregrounds the autonomy of the artwork while ignoring its rootedness in broader spheres of cultural activity. In contrast, the members of the OBeRIu (the oberiuty), were engaged in what some theorists have called deep play: they showed little interest in the épatage tradition practices by the Futurists and drew no meaningful distinction between art and life.I suggest that performative strategies of the oberiuty can be productively interpreted according to Gadamer’s concept of “self-presentation,” a notion that proves immensely useful for understanding not only the group’s theater, but their written work as well. In my second chapter, I show how the OBeRIu’s playful approach to writing was underscored by their commitment to an epistemic understanding of literature: they believed that literary pursuits constitute a unique form of knowledge. I suggest that the texts produced by the oberity frustrate the boundary that supposedly distinguishes poetry and philosophy. I demonstrate how even a playfully ‘absurd’ text such as Daniil Kharms’s “Blue Notebook No. 10” can be read as a work of philosophy—in this case as a kind of performative refutation of Kantian metaphysics. I suggest that the epistemic register of OBeRIu literature can be likened to what Roger Caillois has called games of ilinx—their texts induce a kind of cognitive vertigo that pushes readers towards forms of knowledge that cannot be properly conceptualized. As a form of epistemic play, OBeRIu texts open onto the world even as they exist ‘beyond’ it, inviting readers to appreciate in poetry what Gadamer called “the joy of knowledge.” In the third chapter of this dissertation I argue that the commitment of the oberiuty to an epistemic understanding of literary art places them squarely at odds with premises fundamental to the theories of Russian Formalism. Indeed, I demonstrate how the OBeRIu as a group deliberately problematize the Formalist concept of literariness. I demonstrate that the poetic episteme of the group took direction from Russian Orthodox theology, particularly the concept of the eikon. The epistemic nature of OBeRIu ‘nonsense’ precludes interpreting their texts as exercises in Shklovskian estrangement. Instead, I suggest that Gadamer’s notion of recognition is invaluable for understanding the work of the oberiuty. Their literary work articulates something and in doing so adds to our understanding of the world. In the final chapter I consider the community of chinari, which constituted a kind of intimate ‘inner circle’ for the OBeRIu that was both more private and longer lived than the Union of Real Art itself. I suggest that the chinari circle can be understood as part of a discernible line of extra-institutional play communities in the history of Russian letters that began with the Arzamas Society of Obscure People. I argue that play was the raison d’être of the chinari community and largely defined the sense they had of themselves as an intellectual community. Considering closely Leonid Lipavsky’s Conversations, a more or less authentic record of the group’s discussions between 1933 and 1934, I suggest that the group used the speech genre of bullshit quite productively—it was both a fun way to explore ideas and, more importantly, a phenomenally effective way to foster their collective bond.
5

Belief in the Unbelievable: Yakov Druskin and Chinari Metaphysics

Powers, Patrick D. 23 June 2021 (has links)
No description available.

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