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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.
111

August Wilson's play cycle : a healing Black rage for contemporary African Americans /

Tyndall, Charles Patrick. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2002. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 199-221). Available also from UMI Company.
112

The diplomatic career of Henry Lane Wilson in Latin America

Masingill, Eugene Frank, January 1957 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, 1957. / Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 246-257).
113

Endoctrinement et éducation morale : problématique et pistes de solution /

Djibo, Francis. January 2004 (has links)
Thèse (M.A.)--Université Laval, 2004. / Bibliogr.: f. 133-137. Publié aussi en version électronique.
114

From the Roman republic to the American revolution : readings of Cicero in the political thought of James Wilson /

Wilson, Laurie Ann. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of St Andrews, December 2009. / Electronic version restricted until 18th December 2014.
115

Zum Mechanismus der Kupfer-assoziierten Leberschädigung bei der Long-Evans-Cinnamon-Ratte

Finckh, Matthias. January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
München, Techn. Univ., Diss., 2002.
116

Woodrow Wilson : British perspectives, 1912-21 /

Conyne, George R. January 1992 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Ph. D.--University of Cambridge.
117

Corpo como superfície: fazer-se imagem / Body as surface: making oneself image

Thais Boulanger Cerqueira Martins 25 August 2014 (has links)
Dissertação que pesquisa o desdobramento de espetáculos teatrais em imagens de potencial plástico fecundo na interação entre a cenografia e as artes visuais. Estudos de caso de obras de Robert Wilson que elaboram as questões da tensão entre a ficção e a biografia, além de abordar imagem, corpo, movimento e espacialidade. Desenvolve-se em análise das posturas do espaço quando atravessado por trabalhos que promovem o pensamento acerca da imobilidade e de seu contrário. A reprodutibilidade esteticamente explorada é observada enquanto elemento fundamental na proposta que trata a disponibilidade do corpo justaposta à imagética que este é capaz de produzir. Na análise aparecem alguns materiais - imagens - resultantes de processos artísticos de Robert Wilson bem como de outros artistas como Marina Abramovic e Rineke Djcstra. Estruturado no encadeamento de imagens partícipes de processos de construção e condução de performances artísticas que abrangem as perspectivas da colaboração imagética incorporada ao pensamento criativo que recondiciona o corpo no campo da superficialidade enquanto abrangência poética / Dissertation researching the deployment of theater shows in pictures of fruitful plastic potential in the interaction between stage design and visual arts. Case studies of works by Robert Wilson that elaborate the issues of tension between fiction and biography, adressing in addition image, body, movement and spatiality. Develops in analysis of postures of space when crossed by works that promote thinking about stillness and its opposite. The aesthetically exploited reproducibility is seen as a key element in the proposal that treats the availability of the body juxtaposed to the imagery that this body is capable of producing. In this analysis some materials - images - appear as the resulting of artistic processes of Robert Wilson as well as other artists such as Marina Abramovic and Rineke Djcstra. Structured in the chain of participant pictures of building processes and driving of artistic performances that encompass the perspectives in collaboration of imagery incorporated into the creative thinking that reconditions the body in the field of superficiality as poetic scope
118

Digging up the kirkyard : death, readership and nation in the writings of the 'Blackwood's group', 1817-1839

Sharp, Sarah Elizabeth January 2016 (has links)
This dissertation examines the use of images of graveyards and death in the writings of the ‘Blackwood’s group’, a coterie of authors and poets who published their writing either within the influential Tory periodical Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine or with the publisher William Blackwood and Sons in the early decades of the nineteenth century. I argue that Blackwoodian texts like Lights and Shadows of Scottish Life (1822) by John Wilson imagined the rural Scottish graveyard as a repository for the traditional values and social structures which appeared to be under threat in the rapidly modernising British nation. In these texts the kirkyard functions as a key symbolic space, creating an imagined national ‘home’ for British readers in the idealised Scottish village graveyard. This nostalgic pastoral image of the eternal kirkyard is however in opposition to Blackwood’s Magazine’s reputation for violent, urbane wit and sensational gothic stories. The Noctes Ambrosianae and Tales of Terror articulate a modern, masculine and elite image of the magazine which seem at odds with the domestic, pastoral Scottishness offered in the ‘Scotch novels’ and regional tales. William Blackwood’s publishing house and magazine are at once synonymous with two apparently opposing world views and target readerships, and this tension is most strongly articulated in the tidy Scots graves and unburied corpses of the magazine’s fiction. I examine works published by John Wilson, J.G. Lockhart, James Hogg, D.M. Moir, Henry Thomson, Robert McNish, John Galt, Samuel Warren, James Montgomery and Thomas de Quincey, between the magazine’s foundation in 1817 and the increasing defection of these original Blackwoodians to other periodicals and the retirement of the Noctes Ambrosianae series in the late 1830s. I identify a series of conventions associated with an idealised Blackwoodian rural death before examining the ways in which tales where the conventions of this 'good death' and burial are disrupted by crime, bodysnatching, epidemic disease and suicide challenge or reinforce the world view the rural texts articulated. Chapter one focuses on eighteenth-century ideas about death and sociability. Looking at a group of texts which span from Robert Blair’s The Grave (1746) to Edmund Burke’s revolutionary period writings of the 1790s, it traces what Ester Schor has termed a ‘transition from the “natural” sympathies of the Enlightenment to the “political” sympathies of a revolutionary age’ (75). I argue that in particular Edmund Burke’s creation of a conservative image of nation based on tradition and ancestry acted as a foundation for the type of politicised engagement with the dead which characterised the work of the Blackwood’s group. Chapter two builds upon recent identifications of a Blackwoodian regional tale tradition by highlighting the crucial role of death and the kirkyard in this provincial fiction. Placing John Wilson’s highly popular story series Lights and Shadows of Scottish Life in relation to contemporary debates about Evangelical religion, readership and nation, reveals a series of ideas and conventions which can be identified in other rural writing by John Galt, J.G. Lockhart and James Hogg. Having established an image of what a ‘good death’ might look like and stand for within the Blackwoodian imagination, I turn my attention to deaths which do not follow these conventions. Chapter three explores Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine’s well-documented fascination with spectacular violence in three of the magazine’s signature Tales of Terror and Thomas De Quincey’s ‘On Murder’ essays (1827, 1839). Chapter four looks at three stories from the magazine which feature bodysnatching, focusing on the role which doctors and provincial communities play within these texts. Chapter five compares responses to the 1832 cholera epidemic by James Montgomery and James Hogg. Finally, Chapter six argues for a reading of James Hogg’s Confessions of a Justified Sinner (1824) which foregrounds the role of the suicide’s body within the narrative based on the representations of suicide in contemporary discussion and in Galt’s Annals of the Parish (1821).
119

Ironic American Exceptionalism and the Myth of the Open Self

Jackson, Myron Moses 01 December 2013 (has links)
This work rethinks current interpretations of American exceptionalism, emphasizing dynamic relations, especially those we could call "ironic." I am reading Reinhold Niebuhr's The Irony of American History alongside Eric Voegelin's and Woodrow Wilson's philosophical and political treatment of freedom, expressed through the ideal of American personhood. American entertainment continues to spread globally, and the spreading creates a wider nexus of efficacious relations, allowing for the interplay of hidden relations and symbolic complexes. "Ironic American exceptionalism," as I call it, highlights the positive aspects, usually overlooked, provided by "virtual integration" and the spawning of novel cultural hybrids. By "virtual integration," I mean to include the forms of entertainment that Americans export to the world, including sports, movies, music, etc. I will try to show that popular culture, specifically "entertainment," in a certain sense of the word, serves to facilitate a mythic consciousness of open selfhood to the world. It is also my contention that open selves are not scientific, religious, political, economic, or otherwise, at least in any limiting sense. When freedom is concentrated under any of these movements or cultural interests solely, then the openness and inclusiveness associated with being "American" (in the sense I will explain) is jeopardized. I want to suggest that popular theories of exceptionalism, those revolving around these limited interests, misconstrue what "Americans," as exemplary open selves, aspire to be. Assembling symbolic icons, images, and artifacts, consumed widely, generates the pluralization associated with American identity and liberty. The spreading and exporting of these complexes produces novel hybrids between elitist and low cultural trends, bringing them together in subtle ways. Inquiring into exceptionalism through a philosophy of culture shows that American open selfhood is not peculiarly democratic, Christian, or capitalist. By resisting exemplarist or expansionist exceptionalisms, the "American" service to humanity is exceptional without serving some higher moral cause or false sense of superiority.
120

Corpo como superfície: fazer-se imagem / Body as surface: making oneself image

Thais Boulanger Cerqueira Martins 25 August 2014 (has links)
Dissertação que pesquisa o desdobramento de espetáculos teatrais em imagens de potencial plástico fecundo na interação entre a cenografia e as artes visuais. Estudos de caso de obras de Robert Wilson que elaboram as questões da tensão entre a ficção e a biografia, além de abordar imagem, corpo, movimento e espacialidade. Desenvolve-se em análise das posturas do espaço quando atravessado por trabalhos que promovem o pensamento acerca da imobilidade e de seu contrário. A reprodutibilidade esteticamente explorada é observada enquanto elemento fundamental na proposta que trata a disponibilidade do corpo justaposta à imagética que este é capaz de produzir. Na análise aparecem alguns materiais - imagens - resultantes de processos artísticos de Robert Wilson bem como de outros artistas como Marina Abramovic e Rineke Djcstra. Estruturado no encadeamento de imagens partícipes de processos de construção e condução de performances artísticas que abrangem as perspectivas da colaboração imagética incorporada ao pensamento criativo que recondiciona o corpo no campo da superficialidade enquanto abrangência poética / Dissertation researching the deployment of theater shows in pictures of fruitful plastic potential in the interaction between stage design and visual arts. Case studies of works by Robert Wilson that elaborate the issues of tension between fiction and biography, adressing in addition image, body, movement and spatiality. Develops in analysis of postures of space when crossed by works that promote thinking about stillness and its opposite. The aesthetically exploited reproducibility is seen as a key element in the proposal that treats the availability of the body juxtaposed to the imagery that this body is capable of producing. In this analysis some materials - images - appear as the resulting of artistic processes of Robert Wilson as well as other artists such as Marina Abramovic and Rineke Djcstra. Structured in the chain of participant pictures of building processes and driving of artistic performances that encompass the perspectives in collaboration of imagery incorporated into the creative thinking that reconditions the body in the field of superficiality as poetic scope

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