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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.
61

De L'Elaboration de la legende tristanienne - Germains, Celts, Destin /

Figueira, Armando J. G. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Carleton University, 2001. / Abstract in English. Includes bibliographical references (p. 121-129). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
62

De amasio ad amasiam zur Gattungsgeschichte d. mittelalterl. Liebesbriefes /

Ruhe, Ernstpeter. January 1975 (has links)
Habilitationsschrift--Technische Hochschule, Aachen. / Includes selected texts in Latin and Old French. Includes bibliographical references (p. [455]-468).
63

Individuation and the paradox of love : Toni Morrison's pedagogy of transformation and healing /

Timothy, Ellen L. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2004. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 156-160).
64

Love and the virtues and vices in Chaucer

Slaughter, E. E. January 1946 (has links)
Condensation of Thesis (Ph. D.)--Vanderbilt University, 1946. / "Private edition, distributed by the Joint university libraries, Nashville, Tennessee." Includes bibliographical references.
65

A love-informed fiction Charles Williams's romantic theology in his novels /

Stovell, Beth Marie. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M.C.S.)--Regent College, 2006. / Abstract and vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 150-157).
66

Erotikos logos and paganism in the works of Papadiamantis: an interpretation of the female type

Athanasopoulou, Eleftheria N. 21 May 2009 (has links)
M.A. / The purpose of this study is to introduce to the reader to meaning of erotikos logos in Papadiamantis’ prose. Special attention is also paid to the female type, as it was formed at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century in Greece. The theme of paganism with special reference to the erotikos logos is examined in Preface as well. The examination is based on Triantafillopoulos’ edition, the Άπαντα. In Introduction the theoretical framework is discussed, which is a mixture of formalism, structuralism, Marxism and feminism. The plurality of Papadiamantis work is shown by this manner. Besides, the general approach is mentioned, which is based on a modern system of literary criticism. The main questions which have been posed in this reasearch have been connected to the emergence of the female model in reference to the socio -cultural role, both in that time and in Papadiamantis’ work. Furthermore, the narrative forms and the motives used by the author are mentioned. In addition, the natural, supernatural and linguistic factors effective in erotikos logos are examined. The stucture of the study is as follows: Part I, Chapter A΄, 1, contains a detailed description of the most important events which took place at the end of the 19th century and in the beginning of the 20th century. The influence of the social and historical context is obvious to Papadiamantis’ character and writings. His artistic creativity started early, with translation novels. The social rules and the woman’s sexual identity are examined in Chapter Α΄, 2. Greek society limited woman to domestic activities. Her destiny was to be a dedicated mother and a good wife. The socialization of the female is a great factor which influences her stereotype. It is analysed in Chapter A΄, 3 and focuses on the role of family, religion and education. Τhe traditional female type is given analytically in Chapter A΄, 4. Nethertheless, the differences of the above mentioned type are pointed out in the same chapter. The theme of love and marriage are examined in Chapter A΄, 5. Economic and social criteria make dowry a specific custom and a basic requirement for an arranged marriage, as mentioned in the same chapter. The theme of love appears for first time in Papadiamantis’ novels and is examined in Chapter B΄, 1. In Μετανάστις, his first novel, the traditional type is given in Chapter B΄, 2, according to the techniques of romanticism. In Έμποροι των Εθνών, a revolutionary feminine type is presented in Chapter B΄, 3, with in the historic frame work of the Venetian invasion in the Greek islands. In Γυφτοπούλα, a moderate female type is analyzed in the context of the fall of Constantinople (Chapter B΄, 4). In 1887, Papadiamantis ceased writing romantic novels and turned to country life, as is mentioned in Chapter C΄, 1. He analyzed the social reality, looking inward into the human being, thus experiencing life and pain and not simply theorizing about them. Ιn Chapter C΄, 2, the theme of Platonic love is expressed dramatically. His female heroes usually come from a low class, bear many children, yet suffer from poverty, as is illustrated in Chapter C΄, 3. The majority belong to the traditional woman’s stereotype. Only several go against to the status quo but finally turn back to the traditional way of thinking, as is observed in Chapter C΄, 4. A few go further and refuse to obey the rules. These women become the pioneers of woman’s equallity (Chapter C΄, 5). New facts are added to the existing descriptions of the motif of love in Chapter D΄. The written dialogue Πόσις και Δάμαρ is an example of the difficulty in communication between a married couple. The male is the protagonist and the female the antagonist. The Erotikos logos is a battle between them. The winner is the woman, like Eve in the lost Edem. The theme of nature and paganism in Papadiamantis’ work is described in Part II, Chapter E΄, 1. The triangle woman-magic-erotikos logos is analysed in Chapter E΄, 2. The language of Papadiamantis’ writtings is a mosaic of dimotili, katharevousa, the language of church hymns and of Homer’s work. This post-modern strategy plays an important role in describing erotikos logos (Chapter E΄, 3, 4 ). In Papadiamantis’ times, the woman was taught to channel her libido towards the interests of childbirth and the needs of her husband. She also had to be submissive and quiet by fulfilling roles prescribed in a patriarchal society of domestic duties and child rearing. A close yet negative association between the female and the magic power arises. The man is overpowered by the woman as love through magic seems to be a guided story. On the one hand, Papadiamantis’ work shows the otherness of the female in comparison to the theory of social rules and practise. The Erotikos logos is a dialectical interaction between emotion and language, a great power that stirs everything. On the other hand, it comes to light that the Erotikos logos overcomes pleasure and pain, good and evil and is close to the lost paradise. A bibliography concludes the study. Finally, it is hoped that the findings of the research may lead to a better understanding of Papadiamantis’ writings.
67

Rainer Maria Rilkes Begriff der besitzlosen Liebe : Probleme und Interpretationen

Johnson, Kenn Allen 01 January 1974 (has links)
The topic of this thesis is the problem of love in the work and life of Rainer Maria Rilke, especially his notion of “non-possessive love” which has given rise to a great deal of controversy in the Rilke-Literature. The essential motive underlying the thesis is my concern for the relationship between art and life, and specifically the conflict between the demands of intellectual and spiritual development and the biological-social imperatives to which the artist, like all human beings, is subject. To speak in general terms, my interest in Rilke’s view of love is part of a broad study of alienated and rebellious individualists, bent on developing themselves at all costs in an environment which is hostile to their inner impulses, and for whom the problem of love has been a focal point of their conflict with themselves and the world. The view of love put forth by such individualists as Kierkegaard, Baudelaire, Nietzsche, Shaw, Unamuno, Camus, Sartre, - to name only a few authors mentioned in my bibliography – despite their many individual variations, have at least these characteristics in common: they are penetrating, uncompromising, unsentimental and disquieting. The same holds true for Rilke’s view of love. Rilke emphatically opposed the values implicit and explicit in the notions and practices of his culture in the areas of the relations between the sexes, the institution of marriage, the status of women and the function of sex in the life of the individual. Furthermore, his own experience, which, as he often pointed out, was by no means meant to be exemplary or typical, led him to investigate and reflect upon the nature of love as a principle of nature and of the human psyche. The fruit of this preoccupation was a fascinating, very complicated body of writings in which the problem of love plays a major role. In investigating this theme my primary aim has been to accurately represent and illuminate what Rilke meant by his provocative and often obscure statements about love; that is, it is first and foremost and interpretative paper.
68

Étude des "comptes amoureux" de Jeanne Flore

Girouard, Lisette January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
69

Courtship and marriage in the novels of Thomas Hardy.

Zinger, Anna. January 1965 (has links)
No description available.
70

The bildungsroman in recent Canadian fiction /

Ballon, Heather M. January 1977 (has links)
No description available.

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