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Le faux littéraireMartineau, Yzabelle January 1995 (has links)
This thesis offers both a survey of representative French language literary plagiarisms from Corneille's Le Cid to contemporary internet downloading, and an evaluation of theoretical approaches to plagiarism and plagiarism-related subjects including intertextuality, pastiche, heteroglossia, and citation. The author argues that all-encompassing theoretical approaches to plagiarism cannot account for vast variations, both in the motivation for plagiarizing on the part of the author, and in the reception of the plagiarized material by individual readers and by the literary/discursive community. Varying standards of acceptability for plagiarized texts are contingent upon the historical, political, geographical and legal juncture within which they are undertaken, and the consequences of plagiarisms uncovered vary accordingly. Nevertheless, the author notes an important relationship between prevailing socio-economic relations within the society and the ways in which plagiarism is regarded by the institutions entrusted with the regulation of, for example, copyright, author's rights, and the publishing industry. After considering the findings and failings of the growing corpus of approaches to plagiarism from Angenot to Zumthor, the author concludes that at the end of the day, approaches are most significantly narrowed-down to categories that uphold or reject the practise of plagiarism. Two extreme examples of these categories would be the corporations' attempts to purchase for all time the rights to the reproduction and diffusion of literary texts, and the Bakhtin-inspired approach that emphasizes the point that utterances are common to communities of speakers, and as such redundancy and repetition are inevitable--but so too is assurance that the originality of each repetition will be affirmed by the ever-changing context within which it is spoken. The latter approach, deemed utopic within the present system of economic relations, is not upheld as a panacea: indeed the
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Le faux littéraireMartineau, Yzabelle January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Victorian agnosticism: Thomas Hardy's doomed universeStotko, Mary-Ann 30 November 2003 (has links)
Thomas Hardy described himself as "churchy". Yet his later novels and poetry gave him the reputation of being an agnostic, an atheist and a heathen. He denied that there was any particular philosophy behind his work claiming that it was the result of impressions not convictions. However, I wish to show that Hardy's fiction and poetry expose specific religious beliefs and doubts, that gave rise to his notoriously pessimistic art.
By investigating the themes of sin, atonement and salvation, as reflected in the Mosaic Law and the New Testament against Hardy's mature novels, and examining Hardy's concept of God in his poetry, I aim to show that Hardy rejected the miraculous and the doctrine of redemption but retained a belief in the Biblical premiss that the earth is cursed and that humanity is governed by the Biblical Laws which dictate the consequences of sin.
Hardy depicts a universe in which humankind is cursed from birth, resides on a cursed earth and is denied the possibility of salvation or redemption. Hardy's profoundly pessimistic world view is a result of his inability to accept the Christian doctrines that offer man a means to rise above the curse of original sin. The characters and plots he created in his fiction were born out of doubt and despair. Consequently, his imaginative universe is permeated with doom and damnation. / English Studies / M.A. (English)
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Victorian agnosticism: Thomas Hardy's doomed universeStotko, Mary-Ann 30 November 2003 (has links)
Thomas Hardy described himself as "churchy". Yet his later novels and poetry gave him the reputation of being an agnostic, an atheist and a heathen. He denied that there was any particular philosophy behind his work claiming that it was the result of impressions not convictions. However, I wish to show that Hardy's fiction and poetry expose specific religious beliefs and doubts, that gave rise to his notoriously pessimistic art.
By investigating the themes of sin, atonement and salvation, as reflected in the Mosaic Law and the New Testament against Hardy's mature novels, and examining Hardy's concept of God in his poetry, I aim to show that Hardy rejected the miraculous and the doctrine of redemption but retained a belief in the Biblical premiss that the earth is cursed and that humanity is governed by the Biblical Laws which dictate the consequences of sin.
Hardy depicts a universe in which humankind is cursed from birth, resides on a cursed earth and is denied the possibility of salvation or redemption. Hardy's profoundly pessimistic world view is a result of his inability to accept the Christian doctrines that offer man a means to rise above the curse of original sin. The characters and plots he created in his fiction were born out of doubt and despair. Consequently, his imaginative universe is permeated with doom and damnation. / English Studies / M.A. (English)
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Die uitbeelding van kreatiwiteit in die werk van J. M. CoetzeeNaude, Stephanus Jacobus 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2012. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: J. M. Coetzee se werke ondersoek dikwels op intense en ongewone wyse wat kreatiwiteit
is en hoe dit werk, wat die bronne en oorspronge daarvan is, en verwonder sig aan die
onvoorspelbaarheid van die voorwaardes en katalisators vir, en die aard en uitkomste
van, die kreatiewe proses. Hierdie essay ondersoek eerstens die teoretisering van
literêre kreatiwiteit deur veral Derek Attridge, wat hy hoofsaaklik baseer op Coetzee se
werk. Tweedens word die komplekse uitbeeldings – of performance – van kreatiwiteit en
die kreatiewe proses in Coetzee se oeuvre, spesifiek aan die hand van The Master of
Petersburg en die post-Disgrace werke, ontleed. Daar word gefokus op skeppende
karakters en alter ego’s, veral skrywers, wat toenemend hul verskyning in Coetzee se
prosa maak. Kwessies van skrywerlike mag, die etiek van skryf, die konflik tussen
werklikheidsvlakke binne fiksie asook tussen werklikheid en fiksie, soos dit uitspeel in die
hibriede en eksperimentele laat werke, kom aan bod. Die essay maak dikwels van
stipleestegnieke gebruik in die lees van die betrokke werke. Ander strategieë word egter
ook ingespan, veral by die lees van die laat werke. Die siening van kreatiewe impuls wat
aldus blyk, is ‘n radikale een. Kreatiwiteit is blind vir moraliteit en dalk selfs etiek. Dit
word onder andere gelykgestel aan die epileptiese val. Dit gaan oor die oopstelling vir –
en die eksklusiewe verantwoordelikheid teenoor – die onverwagse, die
Beckettiaanse/Derridiaanse proses van ‘n produktiewe/onproduktiewe gewag. Dit word
vergestalt deur ‘n gebeurtenis wat beslag vind in die onverminderbare eiesoortigheid van
die literêre werk. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: J. M. Coetzee’s work often investigates in an intense and unusual manner the nature of
creativity and how it works, what the sources and origins of creativity are, and marvels
at the unpredictability of the preconditions and catalysts for, and the nature and
outcomes of, the creative process. This essay investigates, in the first place, the
theorisation of literary creativity by especially Derek Attridge, which he mainly bases on
Coetzee’s work. In the second instance, the complex portrayals – or performances – of
creativity and the creative process in Coetzee’s oeuvre are analysed, particularly with
reference to The Master of Petersburg and the post-Disgrace works. The focus is on
creative characters, particularly authors, who are increasingly making an appearance in
Coetzee’s prose. Questions of authorial power, the ethics of writing, the conflict of reality
levels within fiction as well as between reality and fiction, as it plays out in the hybird
and experimental late works, are presented. The essay often uses close reading in the
reading of the mentioned works. Other strategies are also used, particularly in the
reading of the late works. The view of the creative impulse thus crystallising, is a radical
one. Creativity is blind to morality, and perhaps also ethics. It is equated, inter alia, to
the epileptic fit. It is about the opening up – and the exclusive responsibility – to the
unexpected, to the Beckettian/Derridian process of a productive/unproductive waiting. It
is represented by a happening which precipitates in the irreducible singularity of the
literary work.
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Das Verhältnis ethischer und ästhetischer Rede über Literatur eine historische DiskursanalyseGerigk, Anja January 2006 (has links)
Zugl.: Bamberg, Univ., Diss.
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Towards an Ethic of the Lyric: Taking on the Other in “La Mort de Cleopatre” by Marie KrysinskaCulpepper, Abigail 02 August 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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