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  • Comparative Literature - General and Comparative Literary Studies  (5)
  • General works  (5)
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Language
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  • General works  (5)
RVK
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Uniwersytet Warminsko-Mazurski ; 2022
    In:  Acta Neophilologica Vol. 1, No. XXIV ( 2022-05-15), p. 75-86
    In: Acta Neophilologica, Uniwersytet Warminsko-Mazurski, Vol. 1, No. XXIV ( 2022-05-15), p. 75-86
    Abstract: This paper aims to analyze the propaganda mechanisms and strategy of the Kolonistenbriefe monthly with regard to the “Rückgewinnung” action (seeking out descendants of German colonists in the Zamość Region, the Lublin District). The analysis is based on texts published in the journal from April to June 1944. It discusses characteristic lexical phenomenashaping reality in the so-called German colonies with the employment of language. The paper is of an empirical nature and belongs in the domain of press studies.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2450-0852 , 1509-1619
    RVK:
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: Uniwersytet Warminsko-Mazurski
    Publication Date: 2022
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2698588-3
    SSG: 7,39
    SSG: 7,12
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge University Press (CUP) ; 2013
    In:  Theatre Research International Vol. 38, No. 3 ( 2013-10), p. 214-228
    In: Theatre Research International, Cambridge University Press (CUP), Vol. 38, No. 3 ( 2013-10), p. 214-228
    Abstract: This paper is about my experience in the ‘Church of Hampshire’ and the ‘Cosmopolitan Church of Hampshire’ (anonymous names) in Hampshire, England, where I wanted to play the dùndún and gángan (see Fig. 1), the two Yorùbá talking drums. For this I shall be adopting the stance of a reflective practitioner. I have played the dùndún in churches in Nigeria and Hungary. It was this experience that encouraged me to attempt to introduce it to the two churches, hoping that they would welcome new possibilities. This paper will analyse how such expectations were unfulfilled. The extracts in italics are taken from my personal journal. The names of the people in this paper are anonymized. I will start by thoroughly describing the position of music within the Yorùbá culture, and the nature of indigenous Yorùbá spiritual practice.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0307-8833 , 1474-0672
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Cambridge University Press (CUP)
    Publication Date: 2013
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2045177-5
    SSG: 9,3
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress) ; 1996
    In:  Modern Drama Vol. 39, No. 4 ( 1996-12-01), p. 585-598
    In: Modern Drama, University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress), Vol. 39, No. 4 ( 1996-12-01), p. 585-598
    Abstract: In a recent double issue of Performing Arts Journal (50/51), entitled "The Arts and the University," Bonnie Marranca, the journal's co-creator and coeditor with Gautam Dasgupta, penned a provocative survey of the numerous lacunae in theatre studies as practiced throughout the United States. Her essay, "Theatre and the University at the End of the Twentieth Century," adds up to a detailed medical examination of the body politic of various curricula. Marranca points out that theatre in America "lacks a definable epistemology." She goes on to diagnose the ills of an education which has been unable to formulate a well-established critical discourse on the history and nature of this art. Such is not the case, she declares, for Film, Literature, Anthropology, Communications and Media Studies. In her “J'accuse," Marranca calls theatre "a champion of the status quo"
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0026-7694 , 1712-5286
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)
    Publication Date: 1996
    SSG: 9,3
    SSG: 7,24
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge University Press (CUP) ; 2010
    In:  Theatre Research International Vol. 35, No. 2 ( 2010-07), p. 97-98
    In: Theatre Research International, Cambridge University Press (CUP), Vol. 35, No. 2 ( 2010-07), p. 97-98
    Abstract: The academic conference is an important feature of our professional lives. It constitutes a meeting ground, a forum, in which key topics in a field can begin to emerge; where cognate ideas and approaches get debated, affirmed or contested; where, in short, ideas can move (on) through academics being in contact with each other's ideas. Any journal editor is drawn inevitably to the conference ‘season’ as fertile, ‘hunting’ ground; trawls for papers that will yield article publications (if others do not get there first!). And so it is that my second issue of TRI since becoming editor is sourced from the 2008 Actions of Transfer: Women's Performance in the Americas conference, hosted by the University of California, Los Angeles and co-sponsored by the Hemispheric Institute of Performance and Politics. As this event is expertly introduced and the issue framed by co-organizers Sue-Ellen Case and Diana Taylor, this editorial note needs only to be brief. Indeed, I hesitated long at the computer keyboard thinking that perhaps no note at all was necessary. Except that two observations or headlines felt editorially important to me to express: the significance of Actions of Transfer for thinking generally about the nature of the conference event in relation to TRI 's international, theatre research remit, and the mix of articles and the performance dossier brought together in the issue.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0307-8833 , 1474-0672
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Cambridge University Press (CUP)
    Publication Date: 2010
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2045177-5
    SSG: 9,3
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress) ; 2006
    In:  Modern Drama Vol. 49, No. 3 ( 2006-09-01), p. 396-401
    In: Modern Drama, University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress), Vol. 49, No. 3 ( 2006-09-01), p. 396-401
    Abstract: 2006 links Ibsen and Beckett, coincidentally, by accidents of death and birth, ‘‘things dying’’ and ‘‘things new-born’’ held in unlikely fusion by our subliminal need to celebrate significant centenaries or by our habitual scholarly inclination to find significance in the serendipitous. How do we accommodate the crashing gears of nineteenth-century realism to the postmodern world of the absurd or read the nothingness at the core of Ibsen’s many onions in the context of the nothing-to-be-done that defines the experience of postmodern sensibility? It is the assumption of this journal, as Alan Ackerman has indicated in his ‘‘Prompter’s Box’’ preface, that Ibsen defines ‘‘the historical moment that makes modern drama modern’’ — that he is, as Martin Esslin argued at the Ibsen sesquicentennial, ‘‘one of the principal creators and well-springs of the whole modern movement in drama,’’ organically linked even to dramatists like Beckett, whose anti-illusionist techniques seem to deny any indebtedness to Ibsen’s dramatic paternity. The link, Esslin suggested, is not technical but thematic, an existential vision fundamental to the subject matter of modernity: ‘‘the problem of Being, the nature of the self, with the question of what an individual means when he uses the pronoun I. How can the self be defined? Can one even speak of a consistent entity corresponding to an individual’s self?’’. The drift of Esslin’s argument is that Krapp’s Last Tape is a modernist emanation from the central preoccupation of Peer Gynt and that the image of the onion, with its core of nothingness, expands outwards from Ibsen to incorporate the existential quandary of Beckett’s entire oeuvre.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0026-7694 , 1712-5286
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)
    Publication Date: 2006
    SSG: 9,3
    SSG: 7,24
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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