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Arguing with annihilationism : a doctrinal assessment with special reference to recent evangelical debateSaville, Andrew January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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An Essay on the Art of Ingeniously Tormenting for the 21st CenturyThornton, Amber 14 December 2011 (has links)
This satire offers an update of Jane Collier's "An Essay on the Art of Ingeniously Tormenting," an instruction manual for sadists. It includes directions for the beginning tormentor with specific instructions for tormenting strangers, acquaintances, friends, lovers and relatives.
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An Essay on the Art of Ingeniously Tormenting for the 21st CenturyThornton, Amber 14 December 2011 (has links)
This satire offers an update of Jane Collier's "An Essay on the Art of Ingeniously Tormenting," an instruction manual for sadists. It includes directions for the beginning tormentor with specific instructions for tormenting strangers, acquaintances, friends, lovers and relatives.
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Virtuální smrt v počítačových hrách / Virtual death in video gamesŠtěpánová, Petra January 2013 (has links)
The topic of this thesis is virtual death in video games. In theoretical part, the concept of avatar (player's agent in the game world) is defined, concerning the relationship between player and avatar as well as the main characteristics of the avatar. The aim of the theoretical core of this thesis is to introduce virtual death; because of various expressions of death in many games, it is difficult to describe virtual death generally. Virtual death, which is compared also to the real death, is revealed as a communication of player's failure. What can not be separated from virtual death is the instant resurrection of the avatar, and also the means how to avoid virtual death. The practical part of the thesis offers a close reading of the computer role-playing game Planescape: Torment, focusing on the theme of death. Unlike most mainstream games, Torment presents the player with sophisticated perspectives on the matters of life, death, immortality and responsibility. Even the high-order goal of the main character (which becomes the goal of the player as well) is to gain knowledge about himself and then willingly die. This stands in a sharp contrast to usual narratives, forcing the player to suppress the life-saving reflex and let his avatar die in the end. The comparative method is used to identify...
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Identity, discrimination and violence in Bessie Head's trilogyMhlahlo, Corwin Luthuli 30 November 2002 (has links)
This dissertation seeks to explore the perceived intricate relationship that exists between
constructed identity, discrimination and violence as portrayed in Bessie Head's trilogy
from varying perspectives, including aspects of postcoloniality, materialist feminism and liminality.
Starting with a background to some of the origins of racial hybridity in Southern Africa,
it looks at how racial identity has subsequently influenced the course of Southern African history
and thereafter explores historical and biographical information deemed relevant to an
understanding of the dissertation.
Critical explorations of each text in the trilogy follow, in which the apparent affinities that exist
between identity, discrimination and violence are analysed and displayed. In conclusion the
trilogy is discussed from a largely sociological perspective of hope in a utopian society. / English Studies / M.A.(English)
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Moderne Frau und in der Zeit der Industrialisierung / Modern Woman in the Industrialization PeriodKOLÁŘOVÁ, Jana January 2011 (has links)
This thesis deals with an analysis of chosen books written by a famous German writer Thedor Fontane. Particularly, there are three main books I have chosen for my analysis ? Desire, Torment, Effie Briest and L?Adultera. There is a theoretical part at the beginning of my thesis. I have focused on dealing with specialized foundation. This represents later a basic part for a following analysis in the second, practical part. The second part, the analysis of books, includes general information about the book, brief content of a book and attributes of main characters. It is followed by comparison of historical reality with reality shown in the book. At the end of the whole thesis, there is the third part ? comparison of all three novels, generally as well as from the point of view of the main characters and the historical fidelity of books.
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TÝRANÉ DĚTI V ČESKÉ REPUBLICE - PRÁVNÍ ASPEKTY FENOMÉNU TÝRANÝCH DĚTÍ / ABUSED CHILDREN IN CZECH REPUBLIC - LAW ASPECTS OF ABUSED CHILDREN, PHENOMENON.HOFBAUER, Michal January 2011 (has links)
Subject: Abused children in Czech republic - law aspects of abused children, phenomenon. In my master thesis I focused my mind on the CAN syndrome. The work has two parts: theory and research. In the theoretical part I describe the CAN syndrome, its possible impact on child's general development and last but not least what legislation offers for solving this problem. In the research part I used interviews with 200 people to find out public knowledge about his phenomenon, what is their attitude to this problem and what solutions they can think of. The results of the research are described and supplanted by graphs.
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Identity, discrimination and violence in Bessie Head's trilogyMhlahlo, Corwin Luthuli 30 November 2002 (has links)
This dissertation seeks to explore the perceived intricate relationship that exists between
constructed identity, discrimination and violence as portrayed in Bessie Head's trilogy
from varying perspectives, including aspects of postcoloniality, materialist feminism and liminality.
Starting with a background to some of the origins of racial hybridity in Southern Africa,
it looks at how racial identity has subsequently influenced the course of Southern African history
and thereafter explores historical and biographical information deemed relevant to an
understanding of the dissertation.
Critical explorations of each text in the trilogy follow, in which the apparent affinities that exist
between identity, discrimination and violence are analysed and displayed. In conclusion the
trilogy is discussed from a largely sociological perspective of hope in a utopian society. / English Studies / M.A.(English)
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L'exécution capitale à la fin de la Renaissance : discours et représentations / Capital punishment at the end of the Renaissance period : writings and representationsEsnault, Claire 28 November 2015 (has links)
Ce travail a pour objectif d’étudier certaines représentations – écrites et imagées – des exécutions capitales en France, dans la seconde moitié du XVIe siècle et les premières décennies du XVIIe siècle. Ces exécutions sont nombreuses à une époque marquée par d’importants troubles politiques et religieux. Elles ont lieu en place publique, se veulent édifiantes et exemplaires pour les spectateurs, et affirment l’autorité du souverain, qui restaure l’ordre dans le royaume.Cette étude s’organise autour des trois figures fondamentales de la punition : le roi, le peuple et le condamné. La punition entretient toujours un lien très étroit avec l’autorité qui châtie. Nous verrons que les réflexions de Foucault autour du supplice se vérifient dans certaines sources, mais que les écrits et les images ne font pas obligatoirement de ce spectacle une affirmation de l’autorité royale, ni de la justice divine, parfois problématiques. Dans les sources écrites, les spectateurs réagissent souvent à l’exécution capitale et il arrive que les auteurs expliquent les violences populaires dans un cadre extra-judiciaire, comme une tentative de rétablir l'ordre et la justice. Le condamné, lui, est à la fois « acteur » du supplice à travers son comportement sur l’échafaud et « victime ». Ce travail, qui envisage des contextes politiques et religieux différents et compare des sources très diverses, entend montrer que la littérature et l’iconographie construisent une image complexe du spectacle de l’exécution capitale, en particulier à travers les motifs de l’ordre et du désordre qui les traversent. / Our thesis focuses on the representations – textual as well as illustrated – of capital punishments in France, during the second half of the 16th century and the first decades of the 17th century. This period, marked by significant political and religious troubles, saw a large number of public executions, aimed to be edifying and admonitory examples for the audience and to assert the sovereign’s authority to restore order in the realm. This study is centered around the three crucial characters of the punishment: the king, the public and the convicted person. The punishment is always closely linked to the authority which chastises. We’ll see that Foucault’s thoughts about capital punishment are relevant for some sources, but that the writings and the images do not necessarily present this spectacle as an assertion of royal authority, nor of divine justice, sometimes problematical. In the written sources, the audience often react to the execution and authors also attempt to re-establish justice and order during the descriptions of violent popular actions. As for the convicted, they are both “actors” of the executions, through their behaviour on the scaffold, and “victims”. Some traits appear in the convicted’s representations, considering their sex, their age, the religious beliefs of the authors and the different types of texts and images where the convicted are depicted. This study, which considers different political and religious situations and compares very diverse sources, aims to show that literature and images give a complex image of capital punishments’ spectacle, especially through the motifs of order and disorder.
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