280 resultados para Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
Resumo:
Place-names are a fundamental concept in all academic collections: everything happens somewhere. Contemporary place-names are comprehensively represented in digital gazetteer and geospatial web services such as GeoNames. However, despite millions of pounds of investment by JISC and other agencies in historical online resources in recent years, there is currently no equivalent for historic place-names. This project will digitize the entire 86 volume corpus of the Survey of English Place-Names (SEPN), the ultimate authority on historic place-names in England, and make its 4 million forms available.
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A large-scale, site-specific play for the opening of the Titanic Belfast building. A shipyard preacher, desperate to be reunited with his wife and daughter, performs an arcane rite on the centenary of the sinking of the Titanic, meeting souls connected with the sinking of the ship.
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A BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play. A police detective starts having auditory halluincations but the case he is working on provides the clue to his deep-seated psychological conflict.
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An hour-long radio play on BBC Radio 3. A space odyssey with a difference, Moonmen centres on a philosophical encounter between two isolated men - an astronaut and a CB radio enthusiast in rural Ireland. Are they polar opposites or kindred spirits locked in a mutual orbit?
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This study maps the extent of Sallé's influence while identifying her self agency in moulding her image and developing her career.
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Considers Handel's musical response to a dancer-choreographer in line with then-current styles of dance
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Provides incipits of the dances not then in modern editions.
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A letter from dancer Marie Salle to her patroness dated 1731 reveals her ambitions to dance at the English opera.
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This dictionary entry, which highlights the choreographer's significance to the historical study of music, is placed in a very high profile and reputable online resource.
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Highlights the significance of this dancer-choreographer to musicologists.
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This article explores the construction of Andrea Dworkin as a public persona, or a ‘feminist icon’, revered by some and demonized by others. It argues that in both her fiction and non-fiction, Dworkin engaged in a process of writing herself as an exceptional woman, a ‘feminist militant’ as she describes herself in the subheading of her 2002 memoir, Heartbreak. The article illustrates Dworkin’s autobiographical logic of exceptionalism by comparing the story told in Heartbreak to the story of Dworkin’s major novel, Mercy, which features a heroine, Andrea, who shares Dworkin’s name and significant biographical details. While Dworkin has insisted that Mercy is not an autobiographical novel, the author undertakes a reading here of Mercy as the story of Dworkin if she had not become the feminist icon of her own and others’ construction. In Mercy, Andrea unsuccessfully attempts to escape the silent, victimized status that Dworkin has insistently argued is imposed upon women. In her repeated victimization, Andrea functions for Dworkin as an ‘everywoman’ who both embodies Dworkin’s world-view and highlights how Dworkin’s own biography exists in tension with some of her central assumptions about women, gender and contemporary society.