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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

Re-cognizing the unconscious in modernist literature

Trigoni, Efthalia January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
62

Reading matter : modernism and the book

Stephenson, Liisa. January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
63

Windward elegy: an edition of Tomas Tranströmer’s 1952 diary and notebook

Coyle, William Bradley 01 December 2023 (has links)
This dissertation presents a diplomatic edition of a journal and notebook kept by the Swedish poet Tomas Tranströmer (1931-2015) during 1952 when he composed most of the poems in his debut collection, 17 dikter (17 Poems, 1954). That debut began a career that saw him become the most internationally renowned Swedish writer besides Swedenborg and Strindberg (Espmark in Schiöler 14), and “one of the most translated poets of the post-war period, probably the most translated” (14), and culminated, in 2011, with his winning the Nobel Prize in Literature. Lightly edited type facsimiles of the journal and notebook, including his marks of revision, illustrated with reproductions of the poet’s sketches from the documents, and accompanied by en face English translations provide unprecedented insight into his composing process at the time when he was finding his poetic voice. These are in turn followed by an extensive section of commentary identifying literary allusions and echoes in the documents and analyzing his composition and revision process. Also included are metrical translations of the three long poems in blank verse that conclude 17 dikter two of which have not previously been translated in this manner. There are at present no scholarly editions of any of Tranströmer’s published or private works, so this edition represents a major contribution to studies of his poetry, and more broadly to a study of Swedish poetry at mid-century.
64

Modernism's Madwomen: A Feminist and Foucauldian Reading of Emily Holmes Coleman's <i>The Shutter of Snow</i> and Antonia White's <i>Beyond the Glass</i>

Moelders, Britta Maren 09 November 2012 (has links)
No description available.
65

Gertrude Stein : a rationale and content for an introduction to the aesthetics of modernism /

Hunker, M. Beth Sterner January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
66

Detail Outward: How to Add to an Iconic Modern Building

Gwin, Jennifer Fowler 13 June 2012 (has links)
This thesis explores how to design an addition to a modern building that makes the building users cognizant of the layers of history while simultaneously creating spaces that respond to the needs of the occupants today. The existing building, the Washington D.C. Central Library, designed by Mies van der Rohe, is conserved and rehabilitated maintaining the library function and new space is created for the Foundation for the Study of Social Media. The addition and the surgical rehabilitation of the existing are informed by the design concepts and details of Mies van der Rohe as well as the theories of Carlo Scarpa. The project evolves through a detail outward design approach in which material and spatial relationships at critical joints are first determined and then used to inform the design of the whole. / Master of Architecture
67

Cypressens dubbla skugga : Willy Kyrklund och det grekiska

Sjösvärd, Thomas January 2013 (has links)
Willy Kyrklund (1921–2009) anknyter i en betydande del av sina verk till såväl det gamla som det moderna Grekland. I avhandlingen gör nedslag i ett antal av dessa verk, men även Kyrklundforskningen i stort diskuteras. Med inspiration från Peter Szondis diskussion kring en specifikt litterär hermeneutik ställs textens estetiska verkningsmedel i centrum. Medan en ansenlig del av den tidigare forskningen strävat efter att fixera ett fåtal bärande tankar i Kyrklunds författarskap går denna undersökning i en annan riktning: det handlar om att visa på mångfalden och rikedomen i de olika verken. Den teoretiska diskussionen ligger till grund för en serie närläsningar, där såväl beröringspunkter som skillnader mellan de olika verken klarläggs. I de tre novellsamlingarna Ångvälten (1948), Hermelinens död (1954) och Den överdrivne älskaren (1957) väljs enskilda stycken ut, där grekiska element på ett eller annat sätt är närvarande. Ett återkommande drag är hur det förflutna framträder i nutiden, som något främmande. Hur de olika tidsplanen relaterar till varandra tematiseras ytterligare i Greklandsskildringen Aigaion (1957), på ett sätt som problematiserar bokens status av reseskildring. I det korta dramat Platanhårsdialog på en ö i Aigaion (1961) blir det våldsamma förhållandet mellan nuet och det förflutna avgörande för hela formspråket. Med exempel ur två senare prosaverk, Den rätta känslan (1974) och 8 variationer (1982), påvisas slutligen en underliggande logik bakom Kyrklunds angrepp på traditionen, en strategi som får namnet 'antimyt'.
68

A model of anti-modernism : an introduction to Nietzsche’s rationalistic rejection of liberal democracy

Fortier, Jeremy 21 February 2011 (has links)
The thought of Friedrich Nietzsche is often taught, but seldom sufficiently understood, and thus what ought to be most challenging to us about Nietzsche – that is, the rationalistic basis of his rejection of liberal democracy – is not squarely confronted. I propose to lay the ground for such a confrontation. / text
69

Writing Left: The Emergence of Modernism in English Canadian Literature

Vautour, Bart 15 August 2011 (has links)
This dissertation complicates conventional understandings of the emergence of modernism in Canadian cultural production, proposing instead a multiplicity of modernist practices that emerge through direct engagement with leftist politics. By examining various genres—poetry, fiction, theatre, and reportage—“Writing Left” uncovers a set of organizational principles that frame several modes of modernist production within the interwar period. Steeped in the work of recovery, this project examines critical narratives of modernism and analyzes theoretical approaches that inform a revitalized understanding of modernism in Canada. Furthermore, this dissertation offers a series of strategies for reading the ways in which Canadian modernism and political modernity are deeply intertwined. Following an introduction that situates the uneven development of Canadian modernism’s emergence in the larger field of transnational modernism, six theoretically linked case studies show the multiplicity of Canadian modernism’s emergence in relation to leftist political organization. While the first case study discusses the modernist experimentations that came out of the largely antimodernist coterie who produced The Song Fishermen’s Song Sheets (1928–1930), the second case study explores the particularly modernist tensions between representations of art and collective action in the strike novels of Douglas Durkin and Irene Baird. A re-reading of F.R. Scott’s early poetry in the third case study shows the coextensive emergence of a modernist poetics of institutional critique and the development of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, while the fourth case study examines the modernist theatricality of leftist responses to Section 98 of the Criminal Code of Canada. The fifth case study looks to the ways in which the Spanish Civil War prompted modernist developments in the journalism and reportage of Norman Bethune, Hazen Sise, Jean Watts, and Ted Allan. Finally, the sixth case study reads across Charles Yale Harrison’s alternative strategies of anti-war modernism, ending with his characterization of the North American leftist imaginary in his fourth novel, Meet Me on the Barricades (1938). Together, the six case studies question teleological accounts of the development of modernism in English Canadian Literature.
70

Crimes of reason : the Berlin inquiries of Siegfried Kracauer

Chahine, Joumane. January 1998 (has links)
Siegfried Kracauer is mostly known for the work on film theory he wrote during his post-war exile to North America. This thesis proposes to examine a lesser known and far more complex portion of his oeuvre, namely the vast body of essays and monographs he produced throughout the 20s and 30s as editor of the Frankfurter Zeitung, which offer not only a cultural diary of the Weimar republic but also a critique of modernity and the many upheavals it engendered. Using both a detailed analysis of his own work as well as an examination of the various critical responses it elicited, this study aims at exposing the paradoxical complexity of Kracauer's stance towards modernity and its various mass cultural manifestations, a complexity which has unfortunately often been misjudged and reduced to a mere middling position. Indeed, because of his refusal to opt for a definite position, to either fully embrace or reject modernity, Kracauer has often been miscast as a mere seeker of compromise, a thinker who tried to make edges rounder and ease tensions. This thesis is an attempt to prove that far from trying to annihilate the tensions of the modern era, Kracauer in fact sought to cultivate them. He may have refused to opt for a definite stance---be it a "yes" or a "no"---towards modernity, yet his position is not to be reduced to a tepid "maybe", but ought to be seen, rather, as a truly Janusian simultaneous "yes" and "no" towards it. In our age of extreme relativism, where tension is to be avoided at all costs, there is some valuable insight to be gained from Kracauer's obstinate fight against comfortable compromises of any kind.

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