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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.
431

The Light by the Sea - A Novel

Kruger, Abraham 17 February 2022 (has links)
In 1990's South Africa, Danny is haunted by the tragic death of his younger brother. When he moves with his parents to a small coastal town at the bottom of the world, he finds Clara, a bright haired girl with her own painful story. Together, they learn to live and love in a world which they seldom understand. Around them forces shape their paths in ways beyond their comprehension, and they must learn to navigate the lies of adults. Their relationship, naïve and pure, plays out in the Eden of their surroundings. When their longing for comfort from their individual pain drives them apart, Danny must decide if the truth will be able to keep them together and set him free. The brooding memory of his brother threatens to pull him apart, and leads him to a startling understanding. The Light by The Sea is a novel of unseen pain, innocent love and the coming of age journey of two young people trying to find the light again.
432

Gardening at night

Awerbuck, Diane January 2002 (has links)
Summary in English.|Word processed copy.
433

Hyphen

Van Schalkwyk, Tania January 2007 (has links)
Hyphen is a selection of twenty-eight poems (lyrical, narrative and persona poems) and two prose vignettes. The pieces explore ideas of memory, identity, emptiness, loss, love and joy. They are rooted in an itinerant experience of this world and question the concepts of belonging, home, usefulness, art, god and beauty. Most of the work has been inspired by places, moods and events in Mauritius, Saudi Arabia, England, Europe and South Africa. An individual's relationship to landscape, society and self, along with their personal interactions (with humans, animals and gods) form the basis for these poetic explorations of what it means to be in between. In between spaces. In between stages. Phases. Moods. Ideas. Weather patterns. People. In between here and there. Now and then. Home and away. Between the devil and the deep blue sea.
434

In die skadu van soveel bome

Nortje, Hennie January 2011 (has links)
Includes abstract in Afrikaans and English. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 94-96). / This study is a creative exploration of the influence of trees on my poetry. My essay investigates the large number of trees that features in Afrikaans poetry, especially in Groot Verseboek. The relationship between a scientific interest in trees and a creative reflexion on this scientific knowledge is discussed.
435

One tongue singing

Mann, Susan, 1967- January 2002 (has links)
Also available online. / one tongue singing is a novel which unfolds in two time-frames. In the first, a young unmarried French nurse comes to South Africa with her father and her small daughter during the closing years of apartheid. The family settles amongst a small wine-growing community in the Western Cape where they become involved in the lives of victims of the System. In the second frame, the daughter, now about nineteen years old, is a talented artist who enrols at the exclusive Art School of a womanising painter. The man walks a tightrope between popular success and a deep-seated fear of failure (linked to a growing awareness of being a fake). He has started to suffer from panic attacks.
436

The Dust and Other Stories

Lindeman, Evan 01 January 2022 (has links) (PDF)
From Revolutionary France to the frontiers of a fresh-born America, from the Dust Bowl of Oklahoma to the swamps of Poland, The Dust and Other Stories is a collection of short stories that seeks to explore humanity, horror, and history alike. By examining various events of the past, this collection sheds light on the shortcomings we still face today, such as, among other things, the normalization of or outright ignorance towards past American atrocities like those committed in Vietnam; the sheer lengths some people find themselves going to survive poverty, and the blind mania of war and its effect on those (quite literally) in the trenches.
437

Bodies of Clay

Rahman, Noor Ur 01 January 2022 (has links) (PDF)
A little boy named Armaghaan grows in a fictional tribal village Kashmala along the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan during the seventies and eighties. His father Roshaan Khan and mother Shandana are living together in a conflicted marriage. Their desires and needs are at odds with each other, and their children suffer at the cost. Armaghaan observes his parents and elders, explores the physical environment of Kashmala and tries to grapple with his circumstances. The story of Armaghaan's childhood and adolescence plays in the backdrop of the USSR-Afghan War. Though the war itself doesn't become the focus of the narrative, its repercussions do impact the characters in the novel. Apart from that, the story explores themes of domestic violence, sexual and physical abuse, patriarchy, and the essential human struggle to survive and make a sense of the contradictions between personal desires and social norms.
438

In the Light of What They Suffer

Treat, Grayson 01 January 2022 (has links) (PDF)
My thesis, In the Light of What They Suffer, is a collection of six short stories which examine the different ways grace can manifest in our lives, and the consequences of its absence. Each story features characters who, in one way or another, are tangling with atonement. Will the grace they so desperately need be extended? And will the grace on offer make a difference regarding their perceived mistakes and transgressions? While writing this thesis, I was challenged in particular to restrain the tensions in my stories to more adequately fit the short story medium.
439

Blue Heat Burning

Wolff, Mary 01 January 2022 (has links) (PDF)
Blue Heat Burning follows three generations of women (maternal grandmother, mother, and daughter) as they navigate depression, domestic violence, single motherhood, poverty, and homelessness. At the center of their family history is a legacy where addiction is an inherited trait, and suicide is always a solution. The poems in the thesis examine the connections between the three women, starting with the speaker and her grandmother—a grandmother who committed suicide just months after her granddaughter was named in her honor. With a focus on intergenerational trauma, mental health issues, and the gendered impacts of socioeconomic inequities on single mothers and their troubled daughters, Blue Heat Burning examines how a daughter both carries and breaks generational curses passed down by her mother and grandmother.
440

Aliens from Outer Space Don't Know How to Smile

Damm, Ollie 01 January 2022 (has links) (PDF)
Aliens From Outer Space is a novel project interested in telling a young, queer story about finding family in small-town Appalachia. In this book, Science Fiction tropes and imagery are used as allegories for otherness, neurodivergency and social estrangement. Using Appalachian extraterrestrial urban legends as a framework for worldbuilding, Aliens From Outer Space recounts the story of Twig, a teenager abandoned by their mother at the home of their estranged Uncle Indrid, and the imposter who decides to go to great lengths to bring Twig's family back together. This book is a character-driven narrative that examines the intricacies of the relationship and intersectionalities between the neurodivergent and queer communities, using extraterrestrial life as a source of metaphor. This book also aims to subvert the stereotype of stories set in Appalachia as being barren and grueling, and uses humor to punctuate emotional poignancy. No darkness can exist without light. Aliens From Outer Space is a book about blood family, found family, growing up fast, and leaving dear things behind you.

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