981 resultados para Romance de 30
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by Ignatius Balla
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music by Illia Trilling. Lyrics by Chaim Tauber. Libretto by Louis Freiman
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Fil: Calderón de Cuervo, Elena. Universidad Nacional de Cuyo
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Uno de los romances de la tradición moderna más difundidos en los repertorios hispánicos -y no hispánicos-, es el de La Samaritana. Se trata de un romance vulgar, repetido casi literalmente una y otra vez por cientos de transmisores, que en determinadas zonas peninsulares se tradicionalizó y originó una serie de versiones distintas, las cuales, sometidas al proceso de la tradición, perviven en variantes. Mediante los pliegos de cordel y sobre todo, por tratar la presencia de Jesús, gozó de una gran divulgación en la Península y ha llegado hasta nuestros días aún con cierto vigor. El código simbólico se ensancha y enriquece, manifestando con nitidez la interacción del romance con la canción lírica
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Uno de los romances de la tradición moderna más difundidos en los repertorios hispánicos -y no hispánicos-, es el de La Samaritana. Se trata de un romance vulgar, repetido casi literalmente una y otra vez por cientos de transmisores, que en determinadas zonas peninsulares se tradicionalizó y originó una serie de versiones distintas, las cuales, sometidas al proceso de la tradición, perviven en variantes. Mediante los pliegos de cordel y sobre todo, por tratar la presencia de Jesús, gozó de una gran divulgación en la Península y ha llegado hasta nuestros días aún con cierto vigor. El código simbólico se ensancha y enriquece, manifestando con nitidez la interacción del romance con la canción lírica
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Uno de los romances de la tradición moderna más difundidos en los repertorios hispánicos -y no hispánicos-, es el de La Samaritana. Se trata de un romance vulgar, repetido casi literalmente una y otra vez por cientos de transmisores, que en determinadas zonas peninsulares se tradicionalizó y originó una serie de versiones distintas, las cuales, sometidas al proceso de la tradición, perviven en variantes. Mediante los pliegos de cordel y sobre todo, por tratar la presencia de Jesús, gozó de una gran divulgación en la Península y ha llegado hasta nuestros días aún con cierto vigor. El código simbólico se ensancha y enriquece, manifestando con nitidez la interacción del romance con la canción lírica
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Sign.: [calderón]4, 2[calderón]8, 2*8, A-Z8, 2A-2X8, 2Y-2Z4, 3A-3Y8, 3Z10, A8
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Contiene: Breve de Alejandro VII fechada en Roma en Sta. María la Mayor el dia 28 de julio de 1656
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Hay un ejemplar encuadernado con: Bandos divertidísimos contra los borrachos y borrachas, y gente aficionada al vino(NP849.91/3087).
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Advertisements on p. [1]-[6] at end.
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Any cycle of production and exchange – be it economic, cultural or aesthetic – involves an element of risk. It involves uncertainty, unpredictability, and a potential for new insight and innovation (the boom) as well as blockages, crises and breakdown (the bust). In performance, the risks are plentiful – economic, political, social, physical and psychological. The risks people are willing to take depend on their position in the exchange (performer, producer, venue manager or spectator), and their aesthetic preferences. This paper considers the often uncertain, confronting or ‘risky’ moment of exchange between performer, spectator and culture in Live Art practices. Encompassing body art, autobiographical art, site-specific art and other sorts of performative intervention in the public sphere, Live Art eschews the artifice of theatre, breaking down barriers between art and life, artist and spectator, to speak back to the public sphere, and challenge assumptions about bodies, identities, memories, relationships and histories. In the process, Live Art frequently privileges an uncertain, confrontational or ‘risky’ mode of exchange between performer, spectator and culture, as a way of challenging power structures. This paper examines the moment of exchange in terms of risk, vulnerability, responsibility and ethics. Why the romance with ‘risky’ behaviours and exchanges? Who is really taking a risk? What risk? With whose permission (or lack thereof)? What potential does a ‘risky’ exchange hold to destabilise aesthetic, social or political norms? Where lies the fine line between subversive intervention in the public sphere and sheer self-indulgence? What are the social and ethical implications of a moment of exchange that puts bodies, beliefs or social boundaries at ‘risk’? In this paper, these questions are addressed with reference to historical and contemporary practices under the broadly defined banner of Live Art, from the early work of Abrovamic and Burden, through to contemporary Australian practitioners like Fiona McGregor.
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This article considers the distinctive ways in which the Special Broadcasting Service (SBS) has evolved over its history since 1980, and how it has managed competing claims to being a multicultural yet broad-appeal broadcaster, and a comprehensive yet low-cost media service. It draws attention to the challenges presented by a global rethinking of the nature of citizenship and its relationship to media, for which SBS is well placed as a leader, and the challenges of online media for traditional public service media models, where SBS has arguably been a laggard, particularly when compared with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). It notes recent work that has been undertaken by the author with others into user-created content strategies at SBS and how its online news and current affairs services have been evolving in recent years.
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This article examines the representation of Indigenous sexuality on Australian television drama since the 1970s, suggesting the political importance of such representations. In 1976 Justine Saunders became the first regular Indigenous character on an Australian television drama series, as the hairdresser Rhonda Jackson in Number 96. She was presented as sexually attractive, but this was expressed through a rape scene after a party. Twenty five years later, Deborah Mailman starred in The Secret Life of Us, as Kelly, who is also presented as sexually attractive. But her character can be seen in many romantic relationships. The article explores changing representations that moved us from Number 96 to The Secret Life of Us, via The Flying Doctors and Heartland. It suggests that in representations of intimate and loving relationships on screen it has only recently become possible to see hopeful models for interaction between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians.
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Reforms to the national research and research training system by the Commonwealth Government of Australia sought to effectively connect research conducted in universities to Australia's national innovation system. Research training has a key role in ensuring an adequate supply of highly skilled people for the national innovation system. During their studies, research students produce and disseminate a massive amount of new knowledge. Prior to this study, there was no research that examined the contribution of research training to Australia's national innovation system despite the existence of policy initiatives aiming to enhance this contribution. Given Australia's below average (but improving) innovation performance compared to other OECD countries, the inclusion of Finland and the United States provided further insights into the key research question. This study examined three obvious ways that research training contributes to the national innovation systems in the three countries: the international mobility and migration of research students and graduates, knowledge production and distribution by research students, and the impact of research training as advanced human capital formation on economic growth. Findings have informed the concept of a research training culture of innovation that aims to enhance the contribution of research training to Australia's national innovation system. Key features include internationally competitive research and research training environments; research training programs that equip students with economically-relevant knowledge and the capabilities required by employers operating in knowledge-based economies; attractive research careers in different sectors; a national commitment to R&D as indicated by high levels of gross and business R&D expenditure; high private and social rates of return from research training; and the horizontal coordination of key organisations that create policy for, and/or invest in research training.
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Shakespeare’s Ophelia has been circulated in recent times as a figure of the adolescent woman at risk. Mary Pipher’s best-selling and influential Reviving Ophelia (1994) argued that the “story of Ophelia […] shows the destructive forces that affect young women” (20). Without undermining Pipher’s project, this paper reads two contemporary YA romance novels—Lisa Fiedler’s Dating Hamlet (2002) and Lisa Klein’s Ophelia (2006)—in order to demonstrate that not only can Ophelia be appropriated as a figure of empowerment for young women today, but that such appropriations are, seemingly ironically, most powerfully rendered within the genre of romance; a genre long-maligned by feminists as recuperative of patriarchy.--------- These two novels stage interventions both into narratives of female adolescence as a time of being ‘at risk’ or ‘under threat’, and also into narratives of canonical literary patriarchy. Rather than a suicidal Ophelia, subject to the whims of men, these authors imagine Ophelias who take charge of their own destiny; who dictate their own romance and agency; who refuse to be subject to or subjected by, those scripts of cultural authority and heteronormative romance so often perceived as antithetical to female agency. In doing so, they force us to revise our own notions of the romance genre and the functions of canonical literary tradition in contemporary YA culture.