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The broken yoke : a dozen BBC radio plays about the Anglo-Irish past and its presentBloom, James January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Radio drama : a critical study of some radio Venda broadcastsTshamano, Ndwamato Walter January 1993 (has links)
Thesis (M. A. (African Languages)) -- University of the North, 1993 / Refer to the document
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Hilda, Mabel and meScott Jeffs, Carolyn January 2014 (has links)
This thesis explores the work of three women practitioners in radio and examines the process of writing radio drama through a mixture of criticism and practice. It analyzes early theories about radio drama and compares them with those of today, in order to ascertain whether the early ideas are still relevant. Starkey points out that radio has been relatively undertheorized (2004: 204), so this evaluation of the practice of writing radio drama adds to knowledge of the medium as a whole. The work focuses on two women practitioners from the past: Hilda Matheson, whose book Broadcasting (1933), was the first single authored text on radio and broadcasting by a woman published in English (Crook 1999: 12) and Mabel Constanduros, who was a prolific writer and actress of the time, specialising in comedy. Matheson s ideas are compared with those of Val Gielgud and other early theorists, which were more accepted at the time. This analysis leads to close examination of a debate at the heart of radio drama, that being whether noises or dialogue are the best method of storytelling. Finally there is a consideration of the author s own writing practice, using three broadcast radio plays, 21 Conversations with a Hairdresser, 15 Ways to Leave Your Lover and Jesus, The Devil and a Kid Called Death. This provides insight into the changing methods of writing for radio. The findings create a story design for writing the Radio 4 Afternoon Drama. Final written drafts are included, along with audio copies of the plays as they were broadcast. Several different types of criticism create the theoretical base, including works on cultural theory, feminist theory and reception theory, as well as texts on radio, screen, play and comedy writing.
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A critical analysis of M E Ngcobo’s sociological radio playsZulu, Timothy Badwini Mhlasilwa January 2010 (has links)
Submitted in the fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of the DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY In the Department of African Languages, at the University of Zululand, 2010. / This study gives the critical analysis of Ngcobo’s sociological radio plays. The written
plays are examined. The work is arranged as follows:
Chapter one is the general introduction of the study. It paves the way the study will be
conducted which includes among other things; hypothesis, aim of study, scope of study,
definition of concepts, research methodology, theoretical approaches to the study, the
characteristic nature of radio drama, an influence of traditional drama and the synopsis of
all serial radio plays.
Chapter two explores the various theoretical approaches that are applicable in such the
study of radio plays; inter alia; sociological, structuralism, reader, moral – philosophical,
reception, intention, historical – biographical, semiotics and New Criticism approaches.
Chapter three looks at the understanding structure of the radio plays where amongst other
things explores the aspects of society that radio play addresses. It gives comparisons of
social aspects, social disorder / revolt and looks at how Ngcobo addresses such social
revolts in order to bring about social restoration.
Chapter four focuses on the comparisons of the radio plays with regard to style, temporal
which includes time and space. It further focuses characters / actors and narration.
Chapter five looks at the linguistic appropriateness of the radio plays. It seeks to ascertain
Ngcobo’s language how it suits his characters, situation, addresses the questions and
answers’ relationships as they crop up in the plays. Monologue as an integral part of
psychological process describes a mode of mental processes which include sadness,
elation and desolation as felt by characters. It assesses Ngcobo’s usage of dialogue and
also looks at other factors such as mood, place, sound effects, music and sound
effectiveness as important components that heighten the development of the play to the
horizons for its effectiveness. Chapter six deals with meaning and interpretation of the radio plays whereby it deals with
the intention, significance, emerging factors that arise further enhance the development of
the plays. Apparent and challenges that the playwright poses on his plays are also
highlighted.
Chapter seven is the concluding chapter. This looks at the thesis in its final analysis
which gives the summary, findings and observations. It examines the challenges and
contributions of the study with a critical overview and conclusions. Lastly it suggests
some future research on the study of serial radio drama by showing the important
elements as discovered in this study.
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Walter Ntsimane's portrayal of women in the radio series Motlhabane / Dumisa Olive SeshabelaSeshabela, Dumisa Olive January 2003 (has links)
The portrayal of women in Setswana literary works and in the electronic media tends to perpetuate stereotypes of women. This may result in a society that continues to degrade women. Ntsimane, the author of Motlhabane, has written a drama series that depicts women in a negative way through the creation of weak female characters who are often
exploited by males, are gossips, adulterous and generally manipulative and of low morals. Feminist literature has, among other things, challenged, especially male authors who promote and perpetuate negative stereotypes of women. The view that women are weak,
adulterous, possessive and have low morals emerges from traditional cultural perceptions, and thus writers who do not give a balanced view of women continue to portray this view. Women have been discriminated against in many spheres of life, such as in the work place, at home, in politics, in the economy and in society in general. This study explores the portrayal of women in the radio series Motlhabane and reveals clearly that the series fails to portray women as having an important role to play in life and in a family structure and thus need • to be afforded respect. The conclusions of this study are a warning to men about women who do not fit the traditional mould of submissive wives and are therefore looked upon as being morally corrupt and promiscuous. The author does not treat his female characters with respect. The study highlights challenges facing emerging authors who write about women, and directs them to focus on representing women in a balanced manner in their works. The challenge for the emerging generation of authors is to learn to write in a sensitive balanced manner about women. / M.A., African Languages, Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education, 2003
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Walter Ntsimane's portrayal of women in the radio series Motlhabane / Dumisa Olive SeshabelaSeshabela, Dumisa Olive January 2003 (has links)
The portrayal of women in Setswana literary works and in the electronic media tends to perpetuate stereotypes of women. This may result in a society that continues to degrade women. Ntsimane, the author of Motlhabane, has written a drama series that depicts women in a negative way through the creation of weak female characters who are often
exploited by males, are gossips, adulterous and generally manipulative and of low morals. Feminist literature has, among other things, challenged, especially male authors who promote and perpetuate negative stereotypes of women. The view that women are weak,
adulterous, possessive and have low morals emerges from traditional cultural perceptions, and thus writers who do not give a balanced view of women continue to portray this view. Women have been discriminated against in many spheres of life, such as in the work place, at home, in politics, in the economy and in society in general. This study explores the portrayal of women in the radio series Motlhabane and reveals clearly that the series fails to portray women as having an important role to play in life and in a family structure and thus need • to be afforded respect. The conclusions of this study are a warning to men about women who do not fit the traditional mould of submissive wives and are therefore looked upon as being morally corrupt and promiscuous. The author does not treat his female characters with respect. The study highlights challenges facing emerging authors who write about women, and directs them to focus on representing women in a balanced manner in their works. The challenge for the emerging generation of authors is to learn to write in a sensitive balanced manner about women. / M.A., African Languages, Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education, 2003
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Radio texts : the broadcast drama of Orson Welles, Dylan Thomas, Samuel Beckett, and Tom StoppardJesson, James Roslyn 26 October 2010 (has links)
Radio drama developed as a genre as new media proliferated and challenged the cultural primacy of print. The methods of production and distribution and the literary genres that developed during the age of print provided models for radio playwrights to follow but also cultural forces for them to challenge. This dissertation considers these dual influences of print on the radio drama of four playwrights: Orson Welles, Dylan Thomas, Samuel Beckett, and Tom Stoppard. Each playwright “remediates” the printed page in radio plays by adapting or evoking the form of various literary texts, including novels (Welles), travel writing (Thomas), diaries and transcribed speech (Beckett), and historical writing (Stoppard). By representing written texts in an electronic, primarily oral medium, these authors examined the status of literary expression in an age of ascendant electronic media. Welles’s The War of the Worlds and Huckleberry Finn, Thomas’s Under Milk Wood and other broadcasts, Beckett’s Rough for Radio II and Embers, and Stoppard’s In the Native State highlight defining features of the print tradition and reveal how practices of writing and “reading” changed in the radio environment. These plays suggest that radio prompted writers to reconsider the literary author’s creative role, the text’s stability, and the audience’s interaction with the work. “Radio Texts” ultimately argues, therefore, that radio drama’s significance transcends its place in media history and dramatic criticism; the works I examine also point to radio plays’ important role in authors’ re-evaluation of literary expression in a changing twentieth-century media ecology. / text
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The Visual Staging of Audio PlaysBurkart, Alex P 01 January 2016 (has links)
The Visual Staging of Audio Plays explores the directing practice of radio dramas that are staged for viewing purposes rather than their typical solo-auditory purposes. The thesis is comprised of three separate parts: a brief history of theatrical sound, an introduction to radio drama theory and practice, and application. The application portion is a detailed first-person account of my personal experience staging It’s a Wonderful Life: A Live Radio Play by Joe Landry for TheatreVCU’s Mainstage winter special event in 2015. It is also in this section where I integrate history, theory, and practice to formulate technique for directing the genre for stage.
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Between \"Angels and Demons\": trauma in fictional representations of Roger Casement / Entre \'anjos e demônios\': o trauma em representações ficcionais de Roger CasementBolfarine, Mariana 09 October 2015 (has links)
The life of the controversial Irish nationalist Roger David Casement, who was sentenced to death for high treason by the British Crown, has inspired writers to produce works of various literary genres: prose, poetry, drama and critical essays. This doctoral dissertation aims to investigate, under the light of trauma theory as suggested chiefly, but not solely by Cathy Caruth, Ron Eyerman and Dominick La Capra, the ways in which the figure of Roger Casement can be associated with traumatic events that have sealed Anglo-Irish relations. Thus, I have selected works that deal with Casements Life as he acts both for and against the trauma inflicted by imperialism respectively as a Victorian hero in Arthur Conan Doyles The Lost World (1912) and as an oblique presence in the 1916 Easter Rebellion in Jamie ONeills At Swim, Two Boys (2001); the trauma surrounding his Trial and the discovery of the homosexual Black Diaries that culminated in his hanging through his representation as a whole man in Mario Vargas Llosas The Dream of the Celt and in Patrick Masons The Dreaming of Roger Casement (2010); and finally, the trauma that persists unresolved in his Afterlife, as a ghost in David Rudkins Cries from Casement as his Bones are Brought to Dublin and as traumatic memory in the Annabel Davis-Goffs The Foxs Walk. As a result, we have found that the representation of Roger Casement in these works, although in various ways, is a metaphor for the traumatic process itself: an embodiment of the disjunction of temporality, [and] the surfacing of the past in the presente (Whitehead) as his presence continues to haunt the story of the transatlantic world. / A vida do controverso nacionalista irlandês Roger David Casement, condenado à morte por alta traição pela Coroa Britânica, inspirou a escrita obras de diversos gêneros literários: prosa, poesia, teatro e ensaios críticos. Esta tese de doutorado tem como objetivo investigar, sob a luz da teoria do trauma, tal como sugerido principalmente, mas não exclusivamente por Cathy Caruth, Ron Eyerman e Dominick La Capra, diferentes maneiras pelas quais a figura de Roger Casement pode ser associada a eventos traumáticos que selaram as relações Anglo-irlandesas. Dessa forma, foram selecionados trabalhos que lidam com a Vida de Casement, como ele age a favor e contra o trauma causado pelo imperialismo como herói vitoriano em The Lost World (1910) de Arthur Conan Doyle e como uma presença oblíqua na Revolta da Páscoa de 1916 em At Swim, Two Boys de (2001) Jamie ONeill; o trauma em torno de seu Julgamento e da descoberta dos Black Diaries que o levaram à forca por meio de sua representação como um homem completo em The Dream of the Celt (2012) de Mario Vargas Llosa e em The Dreaming of Roger Casement (2012) de Patrick Mason e, finalmente, o trauma não resolvido que persiste em sua Vida após a Morte, como um fantasma em Cries from Casement as his Bones are Brought to Dublin (1973) e como memória traumática em The Foxs Walk de Annabel Davis-Goff. Verificamos que as representações de Roger Casement nessas obras, ainda que de formas distintas, representam uma metáfora do processo traumático em si: Uma personificação da disjunção da temporalidade, [e] o surgimento do passado no presente (Whitehead), visto que sua presença continua a assombrar a história do mundo transatlântico.
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[en] AS I RECALL IT: TUNED-IN RADIODRAMA / [pt] BEM LEMBRADO: RADIOTEATRO EM SINTONIASANDRA CRISTINA DE MEDEIROS 27 September 2005 (has links)
[pt] Esta dissertação tem por finalidade enfocar e divulgar a
trajetória
profissional de Jotta Barroso. Dentre todas as suas
atuações em cinema, teatro e
televisão, priorizaremos o seu trabalho realizado nos anos
1952 a 1956 em
Visconde do Rio Branco (MG), enquanto diretor, produtor
artístico e locutor na
Rádio Cultura Rio Branco. Dos vários tipos de programas
presentes neste espaço
radiofônico, interessa-nos descrever a produção de
radioteatro, Rua da Saudade,
bem como analisar seu processo de construção com seus
códigos e motivos
temáticos protagonizados numa perspectiva melodramática.
Em todo o trabalho há
um percurso imprescindível no universo da memória -
lembranças de uma época
dinâmica, rica por suas produções culturais. / [en] The object of this thesis is to study and publicize the
career of Jotta
Barroso. Out of his various activities in movies, theater
and television, emphasis
will be given to his work in Visconde do Rio Branco, Minas
Gerais State, as
director, artistic producer and announcer, from 1952 to
1956, in Rádio Cultura
Rio Branco. Among the different kinds of programs
associated with Barroso, we
will focus on the soap opera Rua da Saudade, analyzing the
process of creation of
the series, with its codes and leitmotifs, structured
within a melodramatic
perspective. Barroso`s work is marked throughout by a
universe of memories of a
dynamic period, rich in cultural productions.
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