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Between us an invisible columnLaDeau, Philip Ross 07 October 2014 (has links)
This report chronicles the processes and influences relevant to my work as it has developed over the past three years. I examine how our human separateness and new technologies have effected myself and the work I create, ultimately exploring how technology has aggravated this separation rather than mitigate it. I explain my appropriation of digital, repetitious, and machine-like processes in order to recreate this separation, primarily in the form of drawings, sculptures, and photographs. / text
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Neuropsychological studies of melancholic and non-melancholic depressionRogers, Mark A. (Mark Andrew), 1969- January 2001 (has links)
Abstract not available
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Robert Burton's treatment of religious melancholyHaugen, Mary Edna January 1932 (has links)
No description available.
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The Strain of Melancholy in Eighteenth Century PoetrySavage, Manera Crass 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis addresses the possible sources of melancholy evident in Eighteenth Century writing. Possibilities include nature, mental state, attitudes, sentimentalism, and significant works of fiction.
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Melancholy and mirth : realistic and self-conscious modes in Thackeray, Trollope and James /Gilchrist, Andrea Lynn January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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A melancolia em Aureliano José Lessa / Melancholy in Aureliano José LessaJesus, Daniel Santana de 27 June 2014 (has links)
O objetivo da presente pesquisa foi o de verificar qual seria a configuração poética da melancolia em alguns poemas ultrarromânticos brasileiros. O tema é lugar-comum nessa escola literária e foram selecionados poemas de Aureliano José Lessa em que a melancolia se ressaltasse já em uma primeira leitura. As análises revelaram uma apropriação da melancolia que passava longe de uma definição rigorosa dela enquanto desenvolvimento de um estado doentio, de um sintoma. Foi possível, inclusive, indicar com determinada acuidade epítetos que qualificavam a melancolia em função de seu papel na análise. Dessa forma, pôde-se falar em melancolia da História, melancolia da redenção, entre outras categorias / The purpose of this research was to investigate the poetical structure of melancholy in some very romantic Brazilian poems. This subject is a common matter in that literary trend and poems by Aureliano José Lessa were selected in which melancholy was focused at a former reading. Our analyses displayed that the meanings of melancholy seen in his work could not be defined simply as an evolution of a sickness, as a symptom. Moreover, it was possible to reveal with accuracy epithets that qualified melancholy according to the role it played in that analysis. Therefore, we could realize the manifestation of melancholy of History, melancholy of redemption, among other categories
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A melancolia em Aureliano José Lessa / Melancholy in Aureliano José LessaDaniel Santana de Jesus 27 June 2014 (has links)
O objetivo da presente pesquisa foi o de verificar qual seria a configuração poética da melancolia em alguns poemas ultrarromânticos brasileiros. O tema é lugar-comum nessa escola literária e foram selecionados poemas de Aureliano José Lessa em que a melancolia se ressaltasse já em uma primeira leitura. As análises revelaram uma apropriação da melancolia que passava longe de uma definição rigorosa dela enquanto desenvolvimento de um estado doentio, de um sintoma. Foi possível, inclusive, indicar com determinada acuidade epítetos que qualificavam a melancolia em função de seu papel na análise. Dessa forma, pôde-se falar em melancolia da História, melancolia da redenção, entre outras categorias / The purpose of this research was to investigate the poetical structure of melancholy in some very romantic Brazilian poems. This subject is a common matter in that literary trend and poems by Aureliano José Lessa were selected in which melancholy was focused at a former reading. Our analyses displayed that the meanings of melancholy seen in his work could not be defined simply as an evolution of a sickness, as a symptom. Moreover, it was possible to reveal with accuracy epithets that qualified melancholy according to the role it played in that analysis. Therefore, we could realize the manifestation of melancholy of History, melancholy of redemption, among other categories
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Manifestations of jealous-melancholy in John Ford's plays and its relationship to Robert Burton's The Anatomy of MelancholyAngus, Janet Isadore, 1910- January 1950 (has links)
No description available.
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Figuring melancholy: from Jean de Meun to Moliere, via Montaigne, Descartes, Rotrou and CorneilleMertz-Weigel, Dorothee 14 July 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Lothar Osterburg’s Imagining New York: a melancholic picturing of the pastBalboni, Francesca Jean 11 September 2014 (has links)
How do we engage with old photographs or with images that appear to be “old?” Moreover, how do we relate to the past through such images? These are questions I explore through a series of photographs created between 2007 and 2013 by master printmaker, Lothar Osterburg (German, b. 1961). For Imagining New York, Osterburg worked purely from memory, building models of the city from found and everyday materials and composing them through the frame of a fixed camera lens. As his look through the lens suggests, Osterburg’s New York stems, perhaps primarily, from memories of images. His final images, printed as photogravures, may create a similarly memory-fueled experience for the viewer. These images may look and feel quite familiar, but they resist easy identification; the strange artificiality and generic nature of the model may bring to mind any number of associations—real and fictional—spanning the turn of the twentieth century, each slipping into the next.
Thinking Imagining New York through Sigmund Freud’s potentially productive melancholia, and Walter Benjamin’s melancholic “historical materialism,” I suggest that the ambivalence of Osterburg’s images—their particular fixation on the past—invites a mode of viewing that produces a certain distance, a critical remove not only from habitual viewing practices, but also from the viewer’s own relation to the past. But how is this melancholic movement productive today? Osterburg’s images may point to a collective experience in seemingly personal “historical processes” of reflection; emphasizing the status of the past in the imagination as image, it may become something that—together—we actively access and construct to inform the present. And through the critical distance they prompt, these images suggest “work” that is productive in acknowledging, specifically, the misrecognition of the social. During this process of prolonged disjuncture of temporality and space, the viewer quite literally “sees” these images differently. Or rather she may “see” herself seeing them, to become aware of her active role as viewer, as an active presence in the present. And in turn, it may be that the past—a kind of cultural experience—becomes an active, present social formation. / text
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